Safeguarding the world's wheat harvests from stem rust: a global initiative

Wheat is grown on more than 200 million hectares worldwide and is a source of food and livelihoods for hundreds of millions in developing countries. Until the advent of science-based agriculture, world wheat harvests were held hostage by rapidly evolving fungal pathogens, among the most damaging of which were the rusts. Modern breeding, combined with the free international exchange of experimental wheat lines, resulted in the development and wide dispersion of wheat varieties able to resist the rusts for several decades. Many developing country farmers cannot afford fungicides, so resistant wheat varieties constitute a major safeguard of their food security. However, a new strain of stem rust has emerged in eastern Africa that is virulent to most wheat varieties currently sown. Its spread is likely, and a major stem rust epidemic could reduce world wheat production lOpercent-a loss of 60 million tons of grain worth US$ 9 billion or more, as grain prices rise due to shortages. This proposal is for a worldwide consortium to develop and disseminate new, high-yielding, resistant varieties and set in place warning systems, international testing networks, trained staff, and partnerships to detect and counter new, virulent strains of wheat pathogens.

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Bibliographic Details
Format: Newsletter / Bulletin biblioteca
Language:English
Published: CIMMYT 2007?
Subjects:AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY, WHEAT, RUSTS, RESEARCH, GENETIC RESISTANCE, PLANT BREEDING,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10883/3985
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spelling dig-cimmyt-10883-39852023-12-22T16:24:07Z Safeguarding the world's wheat harvests from stem rust: a global initiative AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY WHEAT RUSTS RESEARCH GENETIC RESISTANCE PLANT BREEDING Wheat is grown on more than 200 million hectares worldwide and is a source of food and livelihoods for hundreds of millions in developing countries. Until the advent of science-based agriculture, world wheat harvests were held hostage by rapidly evolving fungal pathogens, among the most damaging of which were the rusts. Modern breeding, combined with the free international exchange of experimental wheat lines, resulted in the development and wide dispersion of wheat varieties able to resist the rusts for several decades. Many developing country farmers cannot afford fungicides, so resistant wheat varieties constitute a major safeguard of their food security. However, a new strain of stem rust has emerged in eastern Africa that is virulent to most wheat varieties currently sown. Its spread is likely, and a major stem rust epidemic could reduce world wheat production lOpercent-a loss of 60 million tons of grain worth US$ 9 billion or more, as grain prices rise due to shortages. This proposal is for a worldwide consortium to develop and disseminate new, high-yielding, resistant varieties and set in place warning systems, international testing networks, trained staff, and partnerships to detect and counter new, virulent strains of wheat pathogens. 4 pages 2014-03-13T01:09:54Z 2014-03-13T01:09:54Z 2007? Newsletter / Bulletin http://hdl.handle.net/10883/3985 English CIMMYT manages Intellectual Assets as International Public Goods. The user is free to download, print, store and share this work. In case you want to translate or create any other derivative work and share or distribute such translation/derivative work, please contact CIMMYT-Knowledge-Center@cgiar.org indicating the work you want to use and the kind of use you intend; CIMMYT will contact you with the suitable license for that purpose. Open Access PDF Mexico CIMMYT
institution CIMMYT
collection DSpace
country México
countrycode MX
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-cimmyt
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname CIMMYT Library
language English
topic AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
WHEAT
RUSTS
RESEARCH
GENETIC RESISTANCE
PLANT BREEDING
AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
WHEAT
RUSTS
RESEARCH
GENETIC RESISTANCE
PLANT BREEDING
spellingShingle AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
WHEAT
RUSTS
RESEARCH
GENETIC RESISTANCE
PLANT BREEDING
AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
WHEAT
RUSTS
RESEARCH
GENETIC RESISTANCE
PLANT BREEDING
Safeguarding the world's wheat harvests from stem rust: a global initiative
description Wheat is grown on more than 200 million hectares worldwide and is a source of food and livelihoods for hundreds of millions in developing countries. Until the advent of science-based agriculture, world wheat harvests were held hostage by rapidly evolving fungal pathogens, among the most damaging of which were the rusts. Modern breeding, combined with the free international exchange of experimental wheat lines, resulted in the development and wide dispersion of wheat varieties able to resist the rusts for several decades. Many developing country farmers cannot afford fungicides, so resistant wheat varieties constitute a major safeguard of their food security. However, a new strain of stem rust has emerged in eastern Africa that is virulent to most wheat varieties currently sown. Its spread is likely, and a major stem rust epidemic could reduce world wheat production lOpercent-a loss of 60 million tons of grain worth US$ 9 billion or more, as grain prices rise due to shortages. This proposal is for a worldwide consortium to develop and disseminate new, high-yielding, resistant varieties and set in place warning systems, international testing networks, trained staff, and partnerships to detect and counter new, virulent strains of wheat pathogens.
format Newsletter / Bulletin
topic_facet AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
WHEAT
RUSTS
RESEARCH
GENETIC RESISTANCE
PLANT BREEDING
title Safeguarding the world's wheat harvests from stem rust: a global initiative
title_short Safeguarding the world's wheat harvests from stem rust: a global initiative
title_full Safeguarding the world's wheat harvests from stem rust: a global initiative
title_fullStr Safeguarding the world's wheat harvests from stem rust: a global initiative
title_full_unstemmed Safeguarding the world's wheat harvests from stem rust: a global initiative
title_sort safeguarding the world's wheat harvests from stem rust: a global initiative
publisher CIMMYT
publishDate 2007?
url http://hdl.handle.net/10883/3985
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