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Norman Borlaug - Black Stem Rust Has "Immense Potential For Social & Human Destruction"

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hatrack Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Apr-04-07 12:26 PM
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Norman Borlaug - Black Stem Rust Has "Immense Potential For Social & Human Destruction"
Edited on Wed Apr-04-07 12:26 PM by hatrack
"This thing has immense potential for social and human destruction." Startling words - but spoken by the father of the Green Revolution, Nobel laureate Norman Borlaug, they are not easily dismissed.
An infection is coming, and almost no one has heard about it. This infection isn't going to give you flu, or TB. In fact, it isn't interested in you at all. It is after the wheat plants that feed more people than any other single food source on the planet. And because of cutbacks in international research, we aren't prepared. The famines that were banished by the advent of disease-resistant crops in the Green Revolution of the 1960s could return, Borlaug told New Scientist.

The disease is Ug99, a virulent strain of black stem rust fungus (Puccinia graminis), discovered in Uganda in 1999. Since the Green Revolution, farmers everywhere have grown wheat varieties that resist stem rust, but Ug99 has evolved to take advantage of those varieties, and almost no wheat crops anywhere are resistant to it. The strain has spread slowly across east Africa, but in January this year spores blew across to Yemen, and north into Sudan (see Map). Scientists who have tracked similar airborne spores in this part of the world say it will now blow into Egypt, Turkey and the Middle East, and on to India, lands where a billion people depend on wheat.

There is hope: this week scientists are assessing the first Ug99-resistant varieties of wheat that might be used for crops. However, it will take another five to eight years to breed up enough seed to plant all our wheat fields. The threat couldn't have come at a worse time. Consumption has outstripped production in six of the last seven years, and stocks are at their lowest since 1972. Wheat prices jumped 14 per cent last year.

Black stem rust itself is nothing new. It has been a major blight on wheat production since the rise of agriculture, and the Romans even prayed to a stem rust god, Robigus. It can reduce a field of ripening grain to a dead, tangled mass, and vast outbreaks regularly used to rip through wheat regions. The last to hit the North American breadbasket, in 1954, wiped out 40 per cent of the crop. In the cold war both the US and the Soviet Union stockpiled stem rust spores as a biological weapon.

EDIT

http://environment.newscientist.com/channel/earth/mg19425983.700
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Robeysays Donating Member (512 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Apr-05-07 01:39 PM
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1. damn...
one more thing to add to the list. also, i don't think many people understand this, but black rust affects all cereal crops. corn, wheat, baily, alfalfa, so on and so on.
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Dead_Parrot Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Apr-06-07 12:46 AM
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2. Yah! More doom!
Time to dig out "The Death of Grass" again...

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