Lesions caused by stem rust on wheat (Credit: Paul Fenwick, Limagrain UK Ltd)
Forgotten crop pathogen may be about to return
Scientists, breeders, farmers and conservation groups must continue to work in close collaboration to prepare for the potential re-emergence of a forgotten crop pathogen, a new study says.
Work between groups has already started following the discovery of a single wheat plant infected with stem rust – the first confirmed case of the plant disease in the UK in over 60 years.
Stem rust of wheat and barley has throughout history been associated with crop failure and famine, and has recently re-emerged in western Europe.
Following the discovery of a single infected wheat plant in Suffolk in 2013, Dr Diane Saunders and Dr Brande Wulff, from the John Innes Centre in Norwich, led a global team to carry out genetic tests that compared this strain to the dominant global populations of the pathogen.
Their results showed that the UK strain belongs to the Digalu race of the fungus, which was responsible for a devastating outbreak of stem rust in Ethiopia in 2013, and smaller outbreaks in Sweden, Denmark and Germany in the same year.
Further investigations carried out by Dr Jane Thomas at the National Institute of Agricultural Botany in Cambridge found that over 80% of UK wheat varieties tested are susceptible to the UK strain of this pathogen.
This indicates that if the strain became established in the UK, a large proportion of UK wheat could be at risk.
The research team warns that UK and European wheat and barley crops could be under threat from a perfect storm of conditions favourable to stem rust resurgence.
Dr Dan Bebber, from the University of Exeter, showed that changes in climatic conditions over the past 25 years suggest increasingly conducive conditions for fungal pathogen growth and infection.
“Our research has highlighted the interactions of climate change, land use and genetics in determining the threats faced by farmers,” Dr Bebber said.
“Climate models indicate that conditions have improved for stem rust in recent decades, while the return of barberry provides an alternative host for the disease.
“Resistant wheat varieties have not been developed. We hope that our study will serve as an alarm call to the industry, that an old enemy may be about to return”
Paul Fenwick, cereal pathologist at Limagrain UK Ltd and co-author of the study, said: “The discovery of stem rust in Suffolk has so far been an isolated one-off occurrence in 2013; however, with global temperatures set to rise by another 1 or 2 degrees over the next century, stem rust could extend its geographic range.
“Therefore, there is the potential for stem rust to become an ever-increasing threat across Europe and so research, such as this, will help to underpin breeding for resistance in the future.”
In addition to the lack of resistance in European wheat varieties, in recent years the alternate host of the pathogen, barberry, has also been increasing in popularity. This hedgerow shrub plays a key role in the life cycle of several rust pathogens including wheat stem rust.
The barberry shrub was largely removed across England up until the early part of the 20th century, as farmers noticed that cereal crops grown adjacent to barberry bushes were at greater risk of stem rust. However, over the last 20 years or so barberry shrubs have been planted in efforts to conserve the barberry carpet moth, an endangered species. Much of this planting is focussed on the relatively few areas where the moth is found, although other plantings have occurred elsewhere.
In the current study, the authors identified cereal rust on barberry in the UK for the first time in decades.
Dr Saunders said: “This highlights the critical need for close management of barberry planting.”
Worryingly, in the same year Sweden also witnessed the first report in Europe for decades of a highly diverse wheat stem rust epidemic that originated from barberry. Dr Saunders said positive work was already taking place between her group at the John Innes Centre and conservation groups working to enhance habitats for the barberry carpet moth.
Mark Parsons, of Butterfly Conservation, said: “We are very concerned about the potential risk from the possible re-establishment of stem rust in this country and the impact it could have on agriculture and the environment.
“The barberry carpet moth is an endangered species restricted to just a handful of sites in this country, it being reliant on common barberry for survival.
“We are, therefore, pleased to be working closely with the John Innes Centre both to minimize the potential risk from cereal rust, but also to enhance the populations of the barberry carpet, and therefore increase its chances of survival in this country.”
The next step in this process, says Dr Saunders, is a larger study to map and sample barberry across the UK.
“Replanting barberry in woodlands, gardens and areas away from arable land would ensure we provide vital habitat for the endangered barberry carpet moth, whilst limiting its potential impact on enhancing rust pathogen diversity,” she said.
The study calls for the “re-initiation of resistance breeding and a review of the mass plantation of common barberry to preclude re-planting near arable land and thereby limit the ability of the pathogen to rapidly overcome any introduced resistance and/or climatic constraints to safeguard European cereals from a large-scale re-emergence of wheat stem rust.”
The paper, published in the journal Communications Biology, is entitled: “Potential for re-emergence of wheat stem rust in the United Kingdom”.
Date: 8 February 2018