September 28, 2005
From: Science News Online, week of 24 Sep 2005; Vol. 168, No. 13
[edited] <http://www.sciencenews.org/articles/20050924/food.asp>
Wheat warning - New rust could spread like wildfire
As the world's population continues to grow, so does its
appetite for cereal grains, which include such dietary staples
as wheat. This growing demand has driven agricultural scientists
to develop higher yielding grain varieties. However, wheat
growers face a challenging threat to bountiful yields with the
emergence of a new and virulent fungal pathogen. It stands
poised to hammer wheat yields globally, according to data
released this month [September 2005] in Nairobi, Kenya at an
international symposium convened to address the blight.
The new fungal pathogen, a variant of the black-stem rust fungus
(_Puccinia graminis_, Pg), has been labeled Ug99 for the nation
Uganda and the year in which its emergence was formally
recognized. Ug99 has been popping up in fields throughout East
Africa. Rusts take their common name from the fact that the
pathogens tend to have a vivid red or orange hue. At the end of
a growing season, black-stem rusts sprout dark spores that can
survive over-winter.
At the Nairobi meeting, officials from the International Center
for Agricultural Research in Dry Areas and the International
Maize and Wheat Improvement Center, an organization best known
by its Spanish acronym, CIMMYT, summed up much of what they know
about the Ug99 variant. For instance, the centers' scientists
noted that most wheat currently being grown around the world has
either established susceptibility to the Ug99 or unknown
susceptibility. At present, CIMMYT officials reported that "only
0.3 percent of the more than 44 million hectares planted to
known varieties [of wheat] is moderately resistant to Ug99."
In monitored test plots of wheat, Ug99 reduced grain yields by
as much as
71 percent. Its virulence indicates Ug99 "has broken down the
sources of resistance that have provided effective protection
[for wheat against black-stem rusts] for over 30 years," the
CIMMYT researchers said.
If not quashed soon, Ug99 infections might bloom into global
crop epidemics within the next 15 years. In Africa alone, CIMMYT
projected that grain-yield losses from such blights could
approach USD one billion. Such events would increase the price
of wheat on global markets and contribute to regional food
shortages. These risks are especially grave for developing
nations where reliance on wheat is high and budgets for
fungicides are almost nonexistent, CIMMYT noted.
At the meeting, CIMMYT officials circulated a new report on
Ug99's threat.
They also announced plans to upgrade or develop new research
centers in the heart of East Africa. These facilities will be
screening local wheat cultivars for newly mutated genes that
might confer resistance to Ug99 and then launching efforts to
breed new lines of wheat carrying those genes.
Although wheat growers around the world had recently come to
view stem rust as a thing of the past, the new CIMMYT report
says, "new data show that such an assumption is no longer, and
probably never was, warranted."
Pesticides are not the answer.
East Africa has long been a breeding ground for new and virulent
stem rusts, probably because the area has a mild climate and
farmers plant wheat year-round.
Ordinarily, stem-rust spores move only short distances, one stem
infecting another as they brush against each other. However,
Ug99 makes 5 distinct types of spores. Of these, the one known
as the urediniospore is especially infectious and unique in its
ability to ride on air currents. Winds can carry these spores
for hundreds or even thousands of miles.
Until recently, the threat of such long-range rust spread was
largely discounted, because scientists believed that ultraviolet
light from the sun would kill spores that got swept into
high-altitude wind currents and then hitchhiked there for days.
To the contrary, recent studies have shown that fungal spores
have survived wind transport from Africa to at least as far as
the Caribbean (SN: 10/06/01, p. 218).
Although large-scale commercial growers typically use fungicides
to control rusts, these chemicals are costly. Spraying can run
to more than USD 100 per hectare, CIMMYT notes.
That exceeds the budget of farmers in developing countries.
Therefore, ignoring these small growers' needs for
Ug99-resistant cultivars risks launching frequent and
potentially uncontrollable black-stem rust epidemics from
untreated fields.
Epidemic pending?
Until a half-century ago, many popular wheat varieties were
vulnerable to many variants of Pg. Mention of their sighting
would trigger terror in the hearts of farmers, since an
infection could rapidly render a healthy field of wheat into "a
black tangle of broken stems and shriveled grain," the CIMMYT
report says.
These fungal blights periodically triggered disastrous
epidemics, until breeders began intense efforts to select and
breed wheat lines with genes resistant to black-stem disease.
Indeed, CIMMYT and its predecessor organization, created in
1943, owe their origins to global campaigns aimed at countering
this wheat rust.
The success of those breeding efforts "has led to complacency
throughout the wheat community," observes Norman E. Borlaug, the
91-year-old Nobel prize winner credited with launching the
"green revolution." It harnessed intensive plant-breeding
programs to improve yields of wheat, maize, and other plants
that serve as dietary staples in developing countries.
Although Ug99 appears confined to Africa at this time, CIMMYT
reports that epidemics of less-virulent wheat-stem rusts have
occurred in Turkey, Australia, Paraguay, and the U.S. Midwest.
These outbreaks indicate that commonly planted wheat cultivars
are vulnerable to Ug99 and other Pg variants, according to
CIMMYT.
In his preface to the new CIMMYT report, Borlaug observes that
breeders around the world have acknowledged that "resistance to
stem rust was no longer a leading breeding objective." And that
is what makes the recent outbreak of Ug99 in East Africa so
troubling, he says.
Borlaug pointed out that, like wildfires, the spread of stem
rust relies on favorable climate conditions, air movement, fuel
(in this case, susceptible wheat), ignition points, and
complacency. "Once started, both [wildfires and rust epidemics]
are difficult to stop," he says.
That's why Borlaug argues that mobilization against this blight
is imperative. "The prospect of a stem-rust epidemic in wheat in
Africa, Asia, and the Americas is real and must be stopped
before it causes untold damage and human suffering," he warns.
At the meeting in Nairobi, CIMMYT thanked Borlaug for "bringing
this problem to the attention of the international community"
and vowed it would indeed be launching a new Global Rust
Initiative.
REFERENCES
Bold, H.C., C. Alexopoulos, and T. Delavoryas. 1986. Morphology
of Plants and Fungi. New York: Harper & Row.
Expert Panel on the Stem Rust Outbreak in Eastern Africa. 2005.
Sounding the Alarm on Global Stem Rust: An assessment of race
Ug99 in Kenya and Ethiopia and the potential for impact in
neighboring regions and beyond.
Mexico City: International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center
(CIMMYT). (8 Sep 2005). Available at <http://www.cimmyt.org/english/wps/news/2005/aug/pdf/Expert_Panel_Report.pdf>.
Reeves, T.G., et al. 1999. New Wheats for a Secure, Sustainable
Future.
Mexico, D.F.: CIMMYT. Available at <http://www.cimmyt.org/whatiscimmyt/pdf/New%20Wheats.pdf>.
Further Reading:
Raloff, J. 2003. Global food trends. Science News Online (31 May
2003).
Available at <http://www.sciencenews.org/articles/20030531/food.asp>.
Ill winds. Science News 160 (6 Oct 2001):218-220. Available at
<http://www.sciencenews.org/articles/20011006/bob13.asp>.
Sources:
Yue Jin, Research Plant Pathologist, USDA-ARS Cereal Disease
Laboratory, University of Minnesota, St. Paul, MN 55108.
Ravi Singh, CIMMYT Wheat Program, International Maize and Wheat
Improvement Center (CIMMYT), Apartado Postal 6-641 06600 Mexico,
D.F. Mexico. <http://www.cimmyt.org/>
[Byline: Janet Raloff]
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ProMED-mail
<promed@promedmail.org>
[This is an expanded version of an earlier report with attendant
references. - Mod.DH]
[see also in the
archive:
Wheat stem rust, new strain - Uganda 20050912.2698 2000
Wheat stem rust in resistant wheat lines - Uganda 20000702.1092]
Related release:
New strain of
wheat rust appears in Africa