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An amateur
botanist in Sicily on Friday claimed he had created the world's
first 'eggplant and tomato tree' as a solution to world famine.
Surveyor
Giuseppe Marino came up with the tree by grafting tissue from
eggplant and tomato plants onto a devil's fig shrub - a spiny plant
from central America that can grow up to five meters in height.
Marino said
the shrub is resistant to disease and thrives in difficult
conditions with little water, adding that his invention could be
''an answer for the G8 to the problem of world hunger''.
''The
eggplant and tomato tree can by cultivated anywhere,'' said Marino.
''It only
needs pruning in winter and it bears both eggplants and tomatoes
from April until September or October.
''The fruits
are very big, with perfect taste, color and smell, and of a better
quality than those grown in the normal way,'' he said.
Marino began
his experiment by grafting various types of eggplant to the devil's
fig - a well known practice among botanists - and discovered that he
was receiving ''constant and abundant'' fruit from the tree.
This year he
tried adding tomatoes to the tree, since - like eggplants - tomatoes
belong to the same genus of plants as devil's figs. ''I have
discovered a perfect symbiosis between the devil's fig - Solanum
torvum - and the tomato, which is the Solanum licopersicum. ''The
tomato develops on the devil's fig in an extraordinary manner,
flowering luxuriously and producing fruit of exceptional
dimensions,'' he added.
In the past
Marino has also perfected giant watermelon plants. |