CO2 emissions threaten one of Africa’s main food crops

A woman carries cassava to her home in Katine, Uganda.

A woman carries cassava to her home in Katine, Uganda.

One of Africa’s most important food crops is likely to become increasingly toxic as a result of carbon emissions.

Cassava is a staple for more than half a billion of the world’s poorest people. It is promoted by U.N. agencies such as the Food and Agriculture Organization as a savior for Africa because it grows well in droughts. But now research shows that increasing carbon dioxide in the air boosts cyanide levels in its leaves, New Scientist magazine reports.

Cassava leaves and roots both contain glycosides, which break down to release toxic hydrogen cyanide when chewed or crushed. Villagers grind cassava roots to make flour, which can be processed to remove cyanide, but leaves are often eaten raw. The cyanide can cause a condition called konzo, which permanently paralyzes the legs. One study found that 9 percent of Nigerians suffer some form of cyanide poisoning from eating cassava.

Now, Ros Gleadow of Monash University in Melbourne, Australia, has found that doubling CO2 levels in the air doubles glycoside production in cassava leaves. Since CO2 levels are expected to reach twice pre-industrial levels by the middle of this century, Gleadow believes cyanide poisoning will be a growing problem. Although the plant’s roots do not become more toxic, they do grow smaller.

“Cassava is a fantastic crop,” Gleadow told a meeting of the Society for Experimental Biology in Glasgow, England, last week. “But there is an urgent need to develop varieties that produce less cyanide.”

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