The
wheat rust threat Global Rust
Initiative tackles a clearly present danger.
When wheat scientists and policy makers convened in
Alexandria, Egypt earlier this month, one might have been forgiven
for thinking that a war was afoot. And it is. Scientists are launching
an offensive against wheat stem rust, an old foe of farmers that
is threatening resurgence.
Words like ‘emergency’, ‘disaster’,
‘catastrophe’, and ‘devastation’, were used
at the meeting to paint a picture of the havoc that epidemics of
the fungal disease, also known as black rust, could precipitate
on the world’s food security and economy. “This is a
global threat...,” CIMMYT Director General Masa Iwanaga told
the First International Workshop of the Global
Rust Initiative (GRI), 9-11 October. “The risk
of a stem rust epidemic in wheat in Africa, Asia and the Americas
is real, and must be averted before untold damage and human suffering
is caused,” said Mahmoud Solh, Director General of the International
Center for Agricultural Research in the Dry Areas (ICARDA).
Preliminary field evidence from Kenya indicated that many more varieties
of wheat could be threatened by rust than previously thought.
The GRI—a consortium coordinated by CIMMYT and
ICARDA that involves agricultural research institutes from 30-plus
countries—will use scientific knowledge and global cooperation
as its primary ammunition to fight the disease. Tactics will include
worldwide surveillance for virulent strains of the stem rust fungus
Puccinia graminis (‘trap nurseries’—small fields
where wheat known to be susceptible to the new disease has been
planted) have been positioned in at-risk countries in Africa, the
Middle East and South Asia); zeroing in on resistance genes and
using these in breeding programs; and accelerated seed multiplication
and dissemination of the new, resistant breeds. “We basically
have to replace all the wheat in the world,” says GRI Coordinator,
CIMMYT wheat scientist Rick Ward.
It is no mean task; farmers and breeders select wheat
varieties for their high yield, robustness against pests and diseases,
but also properties such as grain color, maturity period, and bread
making quality, and the GRI’s work will have to keep these
in mind. Furthermore, preferences vary by region, often depending
on the form in which the wheat arrives at the table. Seed delivery
will also need to be addressed.
Infection with the fungal disease first appears as
deep orange pustules on young wheat stems, and without prompt intervention
with fungicides, farmers’ fields are converted into a tangled
mass of black stems with shriveled grain. Severe infections can
lead to total crop failure. A new variant of the fungus, Ug99, has
established itself in bread wheat farmers’ fields in Kenya
and Ethiopia, and resource-poor smallholders who cannot afford fungicides
are quickly losing the battle against stem rust.
Until new, resistant varieties are in the hands of
farmers, Ward says part of the GRI’s resources will be directed
towards an aggressive regimen of fungicides to suppress stem rust
hot spots before they spread. “A stem rust epidemic is much
like a bush fire; if it’s not contained, it becomes exceedingly
difficult to stop,” he says.
Researchers
at the Alexandria meeting were relieved to hear that GRI-coordinated
screening of twelve thousand wheat cultivars has yielded a handful
of potential Ug99-resistant candidates. This positive news came
from researchers at Njoro, a high-altitude research station of the
Kenya
Agricultural Research Institute (KARI), and the Melkasa station
of the Ethiopian
Institute of Agricultural Research (EIAR). The promising varieties
are being fast-tracked for multiplication and release to farmers.
Ward announced that the GRI will now use molecular breeding, which
reduces the breeding process by several years, as a routine.
Even with modern breeding and communication technologies,
the GRI’s success will hinge on the spirit of global cooperation
to overcome blights that threaten the world’s food security.
For more information contact
r.ward@cgiar.org
www.globalrust.org
See also:
The World’s Wheat Crop is Under Threat from New Disease
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