RAINBOW DIET - GOVERNANCE

News: ICAR-CTCRI to take its tuber-based rainbow diet campaign to more States

 

What's in the news?

       The ICAR-Central Tuber Crops Research Institute (CTCRI) is gearing up to extend its tuber crop-based ‘rainbow diet’ campaign to more areas in the country with sizable tribal populations in Odisha.

 

Key takeaways:

       A constituent institute of the Indian Council of Agricultural Research (ICAR) working on tropical tuber crops, CTCRI had introduced biofortified sweet potato varieties in Anjaw district in Arunachal Pradesh and Dhalai district in Tripura in 2020.

       Last week, the ‘Rainbow Diet’ campaign was launched in Attappadi in Kerala’s Palakkad district. On the occasion, the institute unveiled a ‘Tuber Crops Rainbow Diet Plate’ featuring biofortified sweet potato, cassava, and also millets. In the southern State, the CTCRI had plans to expand the programme to Wayanad and a number of other districts in the months ahead.

 

Rainbow Diet Campaign:

Aim:

       To popular biofortified tubers and value-added products made from them among the tribal communities for tackling malnutrition and ensuring a balanced diet.

 

Features:

       A typical ‘rainbow diet’ is a meal plan comprising different-coloured fresh fruits and vegetables.

       The colours in these natural foods are caused by specific phytonutrients.

       With its tuber crop-based rainbow diet, the CTCRI is popularizing the orange-fleshed sweet potato (rich in beta-carotene), the purple-fleshed sweet potato, and purple-fleshed yam (rich in anthocyanin). 

 

Significance:

       Biofortified tubers were low-cost, natural solutions for promoting health, and wellness in tribal communities.

 

Go back to basics:

CTCRI:

       The ICAR-Central Tuber Crops Research Institute (CTCRI) aims to undertake basic, strategic and applied research for generating technologies to enhance productivity and utilization potential of tuber crops (other than potato).

 

Headquarters: Thiruvananthapuram, Kerala

 

Mandate:

       The Institute has a broad mandate of generating research information on tropical tuber crops that help to enhance productivity and improve the utilization potential.

 

Work:

       Over the years, the CTCRI has developed numerous improved tuber varieties that have since found acceptance with the farming community.

       More recently, the institute has also forayed into millets, experimenting with tuber-millet combinations for nutrition-rich value-added products.