Audio By Carbonatix
Dr. John S. Y. Eleblu, a Senior Lecturer at the Biotechnology Centre and the Coordinator for Research Programmes, Francophone Africa at the West Africa Centre for Crop Improvement (WACCI), has won a project grant of € 50,000 from the International Atomic Energy Agency’s (IAEA) to participate in the Coordinated Research Projects (CRPs) titled “Radiation-induced crop diversity and genetic associations for accelerating variety development”.
Dr. Eleblu will serve as the Chief Scientific Investigator for the 5-year project on “Mapping of Genetic Associations of Number of Pods per Plant and Number of Seeds per Pod in Cowpea”.
The funds are meant to support research work at WACCI for the development of improved varieties of Cowpea (Beans) for higher yields.
As part of this project Dr. Eleblu will establish strong collaborations with scientists at the Texas A&M University, USA and study the effects of Ion Beam irradiation on the genome of Cowpea at the Cyclotron Institute.
“WACCI is proud of Dr. Eleblu for winning this competitive research grant which will give global visibility to his research and extend his range of contacts to key scientists in Europe and the USA”, said the Director of WACCI, Prof. Eric Danquah.
Project Summary
Dr. Eleblu has developed Ethyl Methane Sulphonate (EMS) mutant populations after chemical mutagenesis of a farmer preferred variety of Cowpea popularly known as Asontem.
Out of 6,380 seeds mutagenized and sown, about 4,723 germinated representing 74% and 4,526 lines survived and reproduced thereby giving rise to the M2 putative mutants lines have been developed and characterised for key agronomic traits.
Interestingly, two very important yield parameter traits, namely number of pods per plant and number of seeds per plant studied had huge diversity with great potential for both genetic mapping of the underlying alleles and the development of higher yielding plants.
Under this research project, Dr. Eleblu’s team will study the alleles or genes controlling these two main traits using targeted sequencing of candidate genes and alternatively whole genome sequencing of bulk families with the trait and controls.
In addition, under this collaboration with Texas A&M University in the United States of America, the Cyclotron institute will provide access to its Ion Beam technologies for training of mid-career scientists on its use for irradiation and study the effects of Ion Beam irradiation on the genome of Cowpea.
The International Atomic Energy Agency supports research for the development and use of atomic energy for peaceful purposes globally.
It brings together research institutions from its developing and developed Member States to collaborate on research projects of common interest, so-called Coordinated Research Projects (CRPs).
Latest Stories
-
The 17-hour miracle: Black Sherif beats logistical marathon to pull off historic Zaama Disco 2025
11 minutes -
NPP Primaries: Electoral area coordinators in Ada, Sege declare support for Bawumia
46 minutes -
PSG marks 90 years with Maiden Dinner and Awards Night
53 minutes -
Volta, Oti pharmacists sound alarm over staff shortages, call for action
58 minutes -
Police foil suspected robbery at Ashaiman; 3 suspects killed
1 hour -
Forest Okyeman: Communities rise to defend one of Ghana’s last ecological strongholds
1 hour -
AFCON 2025: South Africa start tournament with win over Angola
2 hours -
Why Ghana’s insurance laws still fail claimants, according to new KNUST research
2 hours -
GPL 2025/26: Medeama score late to draw with Basake Holy Stars
2 hours -
Rapperholic Creators challenge blends digital talent and financial discipline for Ghanaian youth
2 hours -
Justice on a leash – Minority claims law enforcement is being used to punish political opponents
2 hours -
Dr Gideon Boako provides ¢10k seed capital for TanoFest Programme
2 hours -
Bond market: Turnover rose by 64.39% to GH¢6.75bn
3 hours -
Dutylex promises more in 2026; targets market expansion
3 hours -
Government grants permits for Responsible Cooperative Mining in Anwia, Teleku Bokazo
3 hours
