Black Stem Rust / Barberry Program Update

Black Stem Rust / Barberry Program Update

United States Department of Agriculture United States Department of Agriculture Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service Plant Protection and Quarantine Plant Protection and Quarantine • Historical Objectives: Eradication Program • Role in maintaining the durability of resistance in small grain Black Stem Rust / Barberry Program Update crops (wheat, barley, oats, rye) after series of epidemics • Reducing the chances of new rust races developing on alternate host barberry • 1917: Barberry Eradication Program initiated, >600 million (98%) plants eradicated APHIS-PPQ PrakashPrakash K. HHebbar,ebbar, RivRiverdale,erdale, MD • 1919 : Federal Quarantine established, 17 States are listed as Phillip A. Mason, Ft. Collins, CO “Protected States” Anthony Man-Son-Hing, Raleigh, NC • 1981 : USDA eradication program officially ends National Plant Board 86th Annual Meeting Mystic, CT, July 22-26, 2012 Protected States Salting United States Department of Agriculture United States Department of Agriculture Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service Plant Protection and Quarantine Plant Protection and Quarantine Routine Activities:– Regulation 7CFR 301.38 Screening of Barberry cultivars in the Greenhouse at USDA-ARS, Cereal Disease Laboratory, St. Paul, MN (David Long, Yue Jin) - APHIS-PPQ Funding ($45,000) • Rust resistant varieties approved for Rust Infected propagation and commercilaization wheat straws are the • Screening for rust resistance at USDA-ARS, source of Cereal Disease Laboratory (CDL), St. Paul, pathogen MN ((y~ 1 year time line) spores • Statistics; +300 varieties/species tested - Test plants ~25 popular varieties in the market. • Inspections of nurseries in the protected Wire mesh states under Compliance Agreements • Program managed through “Cooperative Humid Chamber (3‐4 days, 80% humidity) Arrangement” SPHDs/SPROs/State Agricultural Dept. Common barberry, Berberis vulgaris is used as susceptible control plants United States Department of Agriculture United States Department of Agriculture Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service Plant Protection and Quarantine Plant Protection and Quarantine BSR program highlights (2010 – 2012) BSR Program • Through the Direct Final Rule process PPQ added 21 new varieties of rust • Out of 35-40 varieties in the market resistant Berberis and 2 varieties of rust resistant Mahonia to the regulated list. 3 majority are B. thunbergii species or more will be added to the list in 2012. their hybrids • Working with the Field Operations folks on resolving issue on “Annual Report” • Plants are locallyy,pp bred, shipped requirements. PPQ is flexible on the nature of the report. States should work interstate, new varieties imported, with the SPHDs. exported to Canada ($?) • Recent USDA-ARS research (Yue Jin et al, 2011) has indicated that B. koreana • Current morphological identification of and their hybrids with B. thunbergii (Bailsel and Tara) are susceptible to stripe 40+ varieties not practical rust (P. striiformis f. sp. tritici ). PPQ does not regulate stripe rust. • CFIA, Canada introduced molecular • Issue of rust symptoms on B. koreana hybrids shipped to Canada resolved with (AFLP) typing as “quality control” in CFIA – thanks to prompt action of USDA-ARS (Yue Jin, Les Szabo). 2008 • Request to Industry stakeholders to fund USDA-ARS for resistant testing of • One instance of rejection of shipment barberry would assist in the sustainability of this important program. Berberis thunbergii from MI to Canada based on molecular typing 1 United States Department of Agriculture United States Department of Agriculture Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service Plant Protection and Quarantine Plant Protection and Quarantine BSR Program Highlights Current Program Status: Barberry / Ornamentals : Mark Brand, University of Connecticut (Funding: NIFA, University • Funding from USDA-FAS – Technical Assistance for Specialty Crops – Grants, USDA-FAS) TASC : $150,000 for 3 years for University of Connecticut, Storrs. Fingerprinting / database development of ornamental barberry varieties. • Research on ecology and invasiveness of barberry using • Farm Bill funding 10201 for BSR proposals: molecular tools • Michigan Department of Agriculture for surveying barberry varieties in nursery B. x ottawensis B. vulgaris B. thunbergii • Hybridization in nature trade between ornamentals and • GIS – Archiving historical data for survey on re-emergence of barberry L. Mehrhoff common barberry • Renewed interest in the BSR program and its role in potential threat from • Mislabeling of ornamental strain Ug99 – PPQ participation in USDA-ARS Recovery Plan varieties surveyed • Successful in leveraging resources and supporting collaborations • Well characterized barberry germplasm collection at Storrs Barberry Nursery at Storrs, CT (M. Brand) United States Department of Agriculture United States Department of Agriculture Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service Plant Protection and Quarantine Plant Protection and Quarantine • Molecular techniques (AFLP) can Farm Bill Funding: Washington State University, Pullman and CPHST, Ft. Collins determine “trueness” and avoid University of Connecticut, Storrs – Mark Brand duplication of names • Re-emphasize the importance of • “Quality Control” expertise at barberry in rust epidemics to B. vulgaris Univ. of Conn. will reduce trade wheat and barley growers issues B. thunbergii • Avoid emergence of new races B.t. “Crimson pygmy” • MSU, MI- Univ. of Conn. Farm Bill of BSR pathogen B.t. “Rose Glow”Glow project: All 151 plants in nursery trade tested, were true to type. • Re-survey for barberry re-growth B. x ottawensis “Concorde” in MN, IA, WI, MT, OR, WA, ID • Clonal variation noticed in 14 samples, mainly in “Crimson Canaan, CT , MAY 09 Les Mehrhoff • Barberry historical survey Pygmy”. records – “L forms” digitized in collaboration with CPHST, Ft. • Eliminate hybrids of common Collins (Lisa Kennaway) barberry (B. vulgaris) from trade? • P. Peterson, Y. Jin, E. Dabaan • Univ. of Conn. Breeding for (MN), S. Foster, T. Murray, X. “triploid” low fruiting capacity Chen, D. Roberts (WA), Idaho varieties - avoid dispersal (M. Cooper), A. Barta (IA), D. Long (WI) United States Department of Agriculture United States Department of Agriculture Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service Plant Protection and Quarantine Plant Protection and Quarantine Barberry Program: Washington State Pacific North West – Barberry Working Group • WA Program initiated in 1944 due to http://pnwstemrust.wsu.edu severe rust epidemics in 1941- 43 and ended in 1978 ¾ Follow-up reports from stakeholders • Only 21 Eastern Washington Counties are protected ¾ Encourage destruction of barberry when found • Re-emergence of common barberry in a small number of sites in both WA and ID Potlach, ID ¾ Reporting suspected stem rust & barberry to • Foster surveyed 100 properties and @ http://PNWstemrust.wsu.edu discovered re-emergence in 9 properties http://pnwstemrust.wsu.edu ¾ Build an archive of PNW barberry eradication • Murray and Chen detected barberry materials and data in 20 locations in Whitman, Stevens and Latah Counties ¾ Resurvey select locations for barberry, monitor BSR development and race composition 2 United States Department of Agriculture United States Department of Agriculture Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service Plant Protection and Quarantine Plant Protection and Quarantine Archiving and Digitizing Barberry Eradication Records for re-emergence survey 1944-1956 Lisa Kennaway, CPHST and Tim Murray, WSU How to Recognize Common Barberry United States Department of Agriculture United States Department of Agriculture Animal and Plant Health Inspection ServiceSurveys in Wisconsin Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service Plant Protection and Quarantine Plant Protection and Quarantine Disease Management & Epidemiology: BSR • Race typing studies at USDA-ARS, Cereal Disease Laboratory reveal a number of new races that can Adrian Barta overcome resistance in currently used wheat lines • It is now recognized that if unchecked, yields in wheat fields adjacent to common barberry or thousands of miles away can be impacted. Rust on barberry leaves • Modeling work to predict movement of new races of rust from Pacific Northwest to other wheat growing regions of the US is on-going at Penn State (Scott Isard). Todd Voss, Iowa Dept of Ag United States Department of Agriculture United States Department of Agriculture Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service Plant Protection and Quarantine BSR and Incursions of Ug99 Plant Protection and Quarantine Cooperative efforts : USDA Flow chart for reporting Ug99 detections Shoes or clothing • USDA-ARS, Cereal Disease Laboratory, St. Paul • Research on early detection tools (L. Szabo) • Race typing of BSR pathogen (Yue Jin) • Breeding for resistance • USDA-APHIS-PPQ / CPHST roles – facilitation, permits, and validation Rust spores • S. Isard, Penn State (USDA-NIFA, Bio-security grant) Modeling current risks of Ug99 movement into W. Hemisphere • Air-borne from East Africa – Not Significant • Human-mediated – Sig. • Air borne (future) from S. America – Sig. • Need for awareness to prevent R. Singh, CIMMYT accidental introduction (shoes, clothing,

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