Potato Agriculture, Late Blight Science, and the Molecularization of Plant Pathology

2008 ◽  
Vol 38 (2) ◽  
pp. 223-257 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Steven Turner

By the mid-1980s nucleic-acid based methods were penetrating the farthest reaches of biological science, triggering rivalries among practitioners, altering relationships among subfields, and transforming the research front. This article delivers a "bottom up" analysis of that transformation at work in one important area of biological science, plant pathology, by tracing the "molecularization" of efforts to understand and control one notorious plant disease——the late blight of potatoes. It mobilizes the research literature of late blight science as a tool through which to trace the changing typography of the research front from 1983 to 2003. During these years molecularization intensified the traditional fragmentation of the late blight research community, even as it dramatically integrated study of the causal organism into broader areas of biology. In these decades the pathogen responsible for late blight, the oomycete Phytophthora infestans, was discovered to be undergoing massive, frightening, and still largely unexplained genetic diversification——a circumstance that lends the episode examined here an urgency that reinforces its historiographical significance as a casestudy in the molecularization of the biological sciences.

EDIS ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 2006 (13) ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael Merida ◽  
Aaron J. Palmateer

PP-232, a 9-page fact sheet by Michael Merida and Aaron J. Palmateer, describes several diseases of guava caused by fungi and stramenopile, describing the symptoms, causal organism, disease cycle and epidemiology, and management for each. Includes references. Published by the UF Plant Pathology Department as part of the Plant Disease Management Guide, June 2006.


EDIS ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 2007 (17) ◽  
Author(s):  
Wayne M. Jurick II ◽  
Dario F. Narvaez ◽  
Carrie L. Harmon ◽  
James J. Marois ◽  
David L. Wright ◽  
...  

PP-235, a 4-page illustrated fact sheet by Wayne M. Jurick II, Dario F. Narvaez, Carrie L. Harmon, James J. Marois, David L. Wright, and Philip F. Harmon, describes this fungal plant disease new to the US since 2004, its symptoms, causal organism, disease cycle and epidemiology, diagnosis, and management. Includes links to web-based resources and references. Published by the UF Department of Plant Pathology, July 2007.


EDIS ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 2008 (6) ◽  
Author(s):  
Tom Kucharek ◽  
Jim Strandberg ◽  
Amanda Gevens

Revised! PP-13, a 3-page fact sheet by Tom Kucharek, Jim Strandberg, and Amanda Gevens, describes this bacterial plant disease affecting cruciferous vegetables and weeds — its causes and symptoms, and control measures. Published by the UF Department of Plant Pathology, September 2008.


Plant Disease ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 100 (7) ◽  
pp. 1482-1491 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marie-Claude Gagnon ◽  
Lawrence Kawchuk ◽  
D. Mathieu Tremblay ◽  
Odile Carisse ◽  
Giovanna Danies ◽  
...  

Phytophthora infestans, a pathogenic oomycete that is the causal agent of potato and tomato late blight, has devastating effects worldwide. The genetic composition of P. infestans populations in Canada has changed considerably over the last few years, with the appearance of several new genotypes showing different mating types and sensitivity to the fungicide metalaxyl. Genetic markers allowing for a rapid assessment of genotypes from small amounts of biological material would be beneficial for the early detection and control of this pathogen throughout Canada. Mining of the P. infestans genome revealed several regions containing single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNP) within both nuclear genes and flanking sequences of microsatellite loci. Allele-specific oligonucleotide polymerase chain reaction (ASO-PCR) assays were developed from 14 of the 50 SNP found by sequencing. Nine optimized ASO-PCR assays were validated using a blind test comprising P. infestans and other Phytophthora spp. The assays revealed diagnostic profiles unique to each of the five dominant genotypes present in Canada. The markers developed in this study can be used with environmental samples such as infected leaves, and will contribute to the genomic toolbox available to assess the genetic diversity of P. infestans at the intraspecific level. For late blight management, early warning about P. infestans genotypes present in potato and tomato fields will help growers select the most appropriate fungicides and application strategies.


2012 ◽  
Vol 102 (7) ◽  
pp. 652-655 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. L. Everts ◽  
L. Osborne ◽  
A. J. Gevens ◽  
S. J. Vasquez ◽  
B. K. Gugino ◽  
...  

Extension plant pathologists deliver science-based information that protects the economic value of agricultural and horticultural crops in the United States by educating growers and the general public about plant diseases. Extension plant pathologists diagnose plant diseases and disorders, provide advice, and conduct applied research on local and regional plant disease problems. During the last century, extension plant pathology programs have adjusted to demographic shifts in the U.S. population and to changes in program funding. Extension programs are now more collaborative and more specialized in response to a highly educated clientele. Changes in federal and state budgets and policies have also reduced funding and shifted the source of funding of extension plant pathologists from formula funds towards specialized competitive grants. These competitive grants often favor national over local and regional plant disease issues and typically require a long lead time to secure funding. These changes coupled with a reduction in personnel pose a threat to extension plant pathology programs. Increasing demand for high-quality, unbiased information and the continued reduction in local, state, and federal funds is unsustainable and, if not abated, will lead to a delay in response to emerging diseases, reduce crop yields, increase economic losses, and place U.S. agriculture at a global competitive disadvantage. In this letter, we outline four recommendations to strengthen the role and resources of extension plant pathologists as they guide our nation's food, feed, fuel, fiber, and ornamental producers into an era of increasing technological complexity and global competitiveness.


2010 ◽  
Vol 100 (11) ◽  
pp. 1146-1161 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter Skelsey ◽  
Walter A. H. Rossing ◽  
Geert J. T. Kessel ◽  
Wopke van der Werf

Strategic spatial patterning of crop species and cultivars could make agricultural landscapes less vulnerable to plant disease epidemics, but experimentation to explore effective disease-suppressive landscape designs is problematic. Here, we present a realistic, multiscale, spatiotemporal, integrodifference equation model of potato late blight epidemics to determine the relationship between spatial heterogeneity and disease spread, and determine the effectiveness of mixing resistant and susceptible cultivars at different spatial scales under the influence of weather. The model framework comprised a landscape generator, a potato late blight model that includes host and pathogen life cycles and fungicide management at the field scale, and an atmospheric dispersion model that calculates spore dispersal at the landscape scale. Landscapes consisted of one or two distinct potato-growing regions (6.4-by-6.4-km) embedded within a nonhost matrix. The characteristics of fields and growing regions and the separation distance between two growing regions were investigated for their effects on disease incidence, measured as the proportion of fields with ≥1% severity, after inoculation of a single potato grid cell with a low initial level of disease. The most effective spatial strategies for suppressing disease spread in a region were those that reduced the acreage of potato or increased the proportion of a resistant potato cultivar. Clustering potato cultivation in some parts of a region, either by planting in large fields or clustering small fields, enhanced the spread within such a cluster while it delayed spread from one cluster to another; however, the net effect of clustering was an increase in disease at the landscape scale. The planting of mixtures of a resistant and susceptible cultivar was a consistently effective option for creating potato-growing regions that suppressed disease spread. It was more effective to mix susceptible and resistant cultivars within fields than plant some fields entirely with a susceptible cultivar and other fields with a resistant cultivar, at the same ratio of susceptible to resistant potato plants at the landscape level. Separation distances of at least 16 km were needed to completely prevent epidemic spread from one potato-growing region to another. Effects of spatial placement of resistant and susceptible potato cultivars depended strongly on meteorological conditions, indicating that landscape connectivity for the spread of plant disease depends on the particular coincidence between direction of spread, location of fields, distance between the fields, and survival of the spores depending on the weather. Therefore, in the simulation of (airborne) pathogen invasions, it is important to consider the large variability of atmospheric dispersion conditions.


2017 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 63
Author(s):  
Andhika Ariadharma

Sales is a major activity in companies that need to be taken seriously, because with the sale of thecompany to earn a profit for the company's survival. Given the importance of sales activity within thecompany, it is necessary to control the sale as well. Sales activity should be planned and carried outeffectively and efficiently as possible in order to profit the company can achieve the optimum point,and the company can also handle and control the sales activity well in line with the growing companyand competition in the business world. In this study, the researchers conducted a case study usingdescriptive analysis research methodology of data collection is done by questionnaires, interviews,observation, and research literature. The method used to test the hypothesis is a statistical method ofSpearman Rank correlation. Based on the results of questionnaires and hypothesis testing is done, theresults obtained by calculating the percentage of 69.22% so it can be concluded that the InternalControl System Sales is designed PT INTI (Persero) is very influence on sales effectivitness.Keywords: Internal Control System Sales, Sales Effectivitness


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