|  12/04/07
          
           A new and virulent fungus that attacks a wide range of wheat varieties
            has spread from East Africa to Yemen on the Arabian Peninsula, FAO
            reported today. 
           
           
            
              photo courtesy of FAO  
               
              
            
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          The wheat stem rust (Puccinia graminis), also known as wheat black
            rust, is capable of causing severe losses and can destroy entire
            wheat fields.  
          It is estimated that as much as 80 percent of all wheat varieties
            planted in Asia and Africa are susceptible to this new strain. The
            spores of wheat rust are mostly carried by wind over long distances
            and across continents.  
          “Global wheat yields could be at risk if the stem rust spreads
            to major wheat producing countries,” said FAO Director-General
            Dr Jacques Diouf. 
          “The fungus can spread rapidly and has the potential to cause
            global crop epidemics and wheat harvest losses of several billion
            dollars. This could lead to increased wheat prices and local or regional
            food shortages. Developing countries that are relying on wheat and
            do not have access to resistant varieties will be particularly hit,” Dr
            Diouf said. 
          FAO has joined the International Center for Agricultural Research
            in the Dry Areas (ICARDA) and the International Maize and Wheat Improvement
            Center (CIMMYT), which are leading the Global Rust Initiative (GRI),
            an international consortium to fight the spread of rust fungus diseases
            around the world. Canada, the United States and India are the main
            donors to the GRI.  
          Ug99 
          The new pathogen first emerged in Uganda in 1999 and is therefore
            called Ug99. It subsequently spread to Kenya and Ethiopia.  
          A recent FAO mission in the field has confirmed for the first time
            that Ug99 has affected wheat fields in Yemen. It appears that the
            Ug99 strain found in Yemen is already more virulent than the one
            found in East Africa. Samples of the pathogen were sent to the United
            States and Canada for further analysis. There is a high risk that
            the disease could also spread to Sudan.  
          Past epidemics 
          Wind-borne transboundary pests and diseases can cause serious damage
            to crop production.  
          In the late 1980s, a virulent strain of yellow rust, a wheat disease
            similar to stem rust, emerged in East Africa and crossed the Red
            Sea into Yemen. It then moved into the Near East and Central Asia,
            reaching wheat fields of South Asia within four years. Major yellow
            rust epidemics were recorded with wheat losses of more than one billion
            US dollars. 
          Based on monitoring of Desert Locust pathways, FAO does not exclude
            that wind currents could carry Ug99 stem rust spores from Yemen northwards
            along the Red Sea to Egypt or through the Saudi Arabian Peninsula
            towards countries in the Near East.  
          On alert 
          FAO urges affected countries and countries at risk to increase their
            disease surveillance. 
          Yemen in particular should be on the alert, step up field monitoring
            and training and prepare for direct control interventions in disease
            hot spots. Most important, control measures in affected countries
            should include the introduction of more resistant wheat varieties
            and restricting planting dates to break the disease cycle.  
          FAO, ICARDA and CIMMYT will support countries in developing resistant
            varieties, producing their clean quality seeds, upgrading national
            plant protection and plant breeding services and developing contingency
            plans. 
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