The Federal University of Technology, Akure, FUTA, has
developed a high-yield new variety of tomatoes.
A
statement from the university on Thursday said the new variety, named Eva F1,
was cultured to suit the Nigerian market through the collaborative efforts of
the School of Agriculture and Agricultural Technology (SAAT) and the Teaching
and Research Farm (TRF) of the institution.
“The
Eva F1 Tomato is a variety five times bigger in size than the commonly
available one in the Nigerian market and it is capable of producing paste more
than four times the latter,” the statement said.
“The
Eva F1 tomato has the rare quality of imperishability over a period of two
weeks from date of harvest.”
Speaking
at the formal presentation of the first harvest of the product to the
Vice-Chancellor, Adeola Fuwape, the Dean, School of Agriculture and
Agricultural Technology, Taiwo Amos, in company with the FUTA Farm Manager,
Olajide Adedayo, said Eva F1 seedling was imported from Israel and carefully
nurtured in FUTA’s Green House under controlled temperature. Mr. Adedayo
described the development as the actualisation of part of the mandate and
determination of the University to put science to work for the society.
He said the Teaching and Research Farm under the watch of
the School of Agriculture and Agricultural Technology had gone into the farming
and production of Tomato Eva F1 variety in the Green House using modern farming
technique.
“High
crop yield is achieved under a small area of land as a unit of the Green House
covers 192m2 (8m x 24m),” he said. “With this technology, the tomato crop will
be grown and produced round the season. The Eva F1 Tomatoes are organically
produced and an indeterminate hybrid variety with an extended shelf life, good
resistance to cracking with flower setting at high temperatures.
“The first harvest of the fruits started after three
months of planting and we hope to continue the harvest for the next six
months.”
The statement by the institution’s spokesperson,
Adegbenro Adebanjo, said departments in the School of Agriculture and
Agricultural Technology such as Agricultural Extension and Communication (AEC)
and Food Science Technology, (FST) were already involved in a joint research
effort through sampling the fruit for analysis and to determine the level of
its nutritional content for finished product such as Tomato paste, Ketchup and
others.
Mr. Fuwape described the successful cultivation and
production of the Eva F1 tomatoes as another proof of FUTA’s robust
contributions to the development of the country through pursuit of excellence
in its area of core mandates. He called on investors and interested agencies to
partner with the university in order to engender massive cultivation of the new
variety and stimulate its contributions to the economy.
“FUTA’s road to the cultivation of Eva F1 tomatoes began
with the immediate past Dean of SAAT, Professor Shadrack Akindele who saw the
product on a working visit to Israel, got linked with Dizengoft Nigeria, had a
discussion with the organisation and sold the idea to the University Management
and got approval for its cultivation and production through a Green House
modern farming technique,” the statement added.
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