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diseases, plant 561





                 The Irish Potato Famine

                 The following account of the Irish potato famine was  make such persons distribute such a starvation of
                 provided by Alexander Somerville (1811-1885), the  food over seven days equally. Their natural cravings
                 British journalist whose Letters from Ireland during  made them eat it up at once, or in one, or three days
                 the Famine of 1847 were published in the Manches-  at most, leaving the other days blank, making the
                 ter Examiner.                                   pangs of hunger still worse.
                                                                   But in the calculation I am supposing all the wages
                 I saw the poor man and his poor family, and truly
                                                                 go for meal. I believe none of it was expended on any-
                 might he say,“God have mercy!” They were skeletons
                                                                 thing else, not even salt, save fuel: fuel in this village
                 all of them, with skin on the bones and life within the
                                                                 must all be purchased by such people; they are not
                 skin. A mother skeleton and baby skeleton; a tall boy
                                                                 allowed to go to the bogs to cut it for themselves. Nor
                 skeleton, who had no work to do; who could do
                                                                 is this the season to go to the bogs, if they were
                 nothing but eat, and had nothing to eat. Four female
                                                                 allowed.The fuel required to keep the household fire
                 children skeletons, and the tall father skeleton, not
                                                                 merely burning, hardly sufficient to give warmth to
                 able to work to get food for them, and not able to get
                                                                 eight persons around it, to say nothing of half-naked
                 enough of food when he did work for them. Their
                                                                 persons, would cost at least sixpence a day. Where-
                 only food was what his wages of 10 d. per day
                                                                 fore, no fuel was used by this family, nor by other
                 would procure of “yellow meal”—the meal of the
                                                                 working families, but what was required to boil the
                 Indian corn.The price of that was 3s. per stone of 16
                                                                 meal into a stirabout ...
                 lb. This gave for the eight persons 26 lb. 10 oz. of
                                                                 Source: Somerville, A. (1994). Letters from Ireland during the famine of 1847. Dublin:
                 meal for seven days; being about seven ounces and a  Irish Academic Press.
                 half per day for each person. No self-control could


            potato propagates by shoots, new potatoes, barring  ine, the German socialist Karl Marx and his English
            mutation, are genetic equivalents of the parent potato.  counterpart Friedrich Engels in 1848 denounced the
            With all potatoes near carbon copies of one another, any  exploitation of the poor in the Communist Manifesto.
            disease that threatens one potato threatens all.    Revolution swept across Europe that year as intellectuals
              With the potato vulnerable, catastrophe struck in  and the poor demanded an end to oppression. The
            1845. Six weeks of rain hastened the spread of the blight  potato blight was more than a disease; it was a call to
            fungus across Ireland.The plants died and potatoes rot-  arms, a call for political and economic reforms. The po-
            ted in the ground. Blight struck again in 1846.Their sta-  tato blight thus left its imprint on agriculture, science,
            ple gone, the Irish scrounged for nuts and roots while  politics, and economics.
            English landlords took their wheat and livestock. One
            million starved and 1.5 million fled Ireland.        Corn Diseases
              The tragedy galvanized scientists throughout Europe  As with potato diseases, scientists know little about corn
            into action. In 1861 Anton de Bary isolated the culprit, a  diseases during the pre-Columbian period.What is clear,
            fungus he named Phytophthora infestans, and by spread-  however, is that corn, unlike potato, is a cross-pollinating
            ing it on healthy potato plants demonstrated that it  plant that produces plants with genetic diversity. Cross-
            caused blight.The Potato Famine had spurred de Bary’s  breeding achieves diversity by reshuffling chromosomes
            discovery,which marked the beginning of plant pathology  in any plant or animal, including humans.This diversity
            as a science.                                       should minimize the occurrence of epidemics, for within
              More than that, potato blight made conspicuous the  a heterogeneous population some individuals, in this case
            evils of economic oppression. On the heels of the fam-  corn plants, should be resistant to disease.
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