Plant Pests - Global Travellers
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News about spread of plants, insects, bacteria and other harmful organisms moving with trade and traffic.
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Tv Meio Ambiente | Infection sites have 'doubled within a month'

Tv Meio Ambiente | Infection sites have 'doubled within a month' | Plant Pests - Global Travellers | Scoop.it

The fungus Chalara fraxinea was first identified in the UK in February 2012 in a tree imported from the Netherlands to a nursery in Buckinghamshire. It has now been found at 136 sites linked to imported plants and a further 155 sites in the wider environment, which government scientists think were infected by wind-blown spores from continental Europe. The disease has devastated ash trees in many countries including Denmark where 90% have been infected.

The UK’s control plan is based on four measures – “reduce, develop, encourage and adapt”, said Prof Ian Boyd, chief scientist at the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra). He said the aim was to reduce the spread of Chalara, develop new control measures and resistant varieties, encourage the public and industry to help out and adapt the nation’s forests to the inevitable changes. More than 13% of the country’s broad-leaved woods are dominated by ash trees.


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Emerging fungal threats to animal, plant and ecosystem health

Emerging fungal threats to animal, plant and ecosystem health | Plant Pests - Global Travellers | Scoop.it

A recent review published in Nature argues that nascent fungal infections will cause increasing attrition of biodiversity, with wider implications for human and ecosystem health, unless steps are taken to tighten biosecurity worldwide.

 

The past two decades have seen an increasing number of virulent infectious diseases in natural populations and managed landscapes. In both animals and plants, an unprecedented number of fungal and fungal-like diseases have recently caused some of the most severe die-offs and extinctions ever witnessed in wild species, and are jeopardizing food security. Human activity is intensifying fungal disease dispersal by modifying natural environments and thus creating new opportunities for evolution.

 

Fisher MC, Henk DA, Briggs CJ, Brownstein JS, Madoff LC, McCraw SL, Gurr SJ (2012) Emerging fungal threats to animal, plant and ecosystem health.- Nature Volume: 484, Pages: 186–194. DOI: doi:10.1038/nature10947

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