Scientists at BINA have been developing radiation-induced plant varieties that can resist diverse climatic conditions. In the last decades, these plant varieties have helped farmers increase rice production three-fold, ensuring food security and giving this predominantly agricultural country an important economic push.
The more than 60 plant varieties the scientists can offer to farmers today have been developed through a process called plant mutation breeding (see Plant mutation breeding). These varieties of rice, lentils, chickpeas, peanuts, mustard, sesame, soybean, jute, tomato and wheat have now become popular across Bangladesh, accounting for about 8% of its crops, helping farmers produce a steady supply of these crops and improving livelihoods.
“Irradiation can be used to induce mutations in plants to produce varieties that display improved product quality, have higher yields and yield stability, greater resilience to climate change and tolerance to environmental stresses,” said Ljupcho Jankuloski, plant breeder and geneticist at the Joint FAO/IAEA Division of Nuclear Techniques in Food and Agriculture. “The rice mutant varieties developed at BINA have helped Bangladesh increase its rice production in the last few decades.”










