scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Integrating pests and pathogens into the climate change/food security debate

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
More mechanistic inclusion of pests and pathogen effects in crop models would lead to more realistic predictions of crop production on a regional scale and thereby assist in the development of more robust regional food security policies.
Abstract
While many studies have demonstrated the sensitivities of plants and of crop yield to a changing climate, a major challenge for the agricultural research community is to relate these findings to the broader societal concern with food security. This paper reviews the direct effects of climate on both crop growth and yield and on plant pests and pathogens and the interactions that may occur between crops, pests, and pathogens under changed climate. Finally, we consider the contribution that better understanding of the roles of pests and pathogens in crop production systems might make to enhanced food security. Evidence for the measured climate change on crops and their associated pests and pathogens is starting to be documented. Globally atmospheric [CO(2)] has increased, and in northern latitudes mean temperature at many locations has increased by about 1.0-1.4 degrees C with accompanying changes in pest and pathogen incidence and to farming practices. Many pests and pathogens exhibit considerable capacity for generating, recombining, and selecting fit combinations of variants in key pathogenicity, fitness, and aggressiveness traits that there is little doubt that any new opportunities resulting from climate change will be exploited by them. However, the interactions between crops and pests and pathogens are complex and poorly understood in the context of climate change. More mechanistic inclusion of pests and pathogen effects in crop models would lead to more realistic predictions of crop production on a regional scale and thereby assist in the development of more robust regional food security policies.

read more

Content maybe subject to copyright    Report

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Emerging fungal threats to animal, plant and ecosystem health.

TL;DR: It is argued that nascent fungal infections will cause increasing attrition of biodiversity, with wider implications for human and ecosystem health, unless steps are taken to tighten biosecurity worldwide.
Journal ArticleDOI

A meta-analysis of crop yield under climate change and adaptation

TL;DR: In this paper, a comprehensive summary of studies that simulate climate change impacts on agriculture are reported in a meta-analysis, which suggests that aggregate yield losses should be expected for wheat, rice and maize in temperate and tropical growing regions even under relatively moderate levels of local warming.
Journal ArticleDOI

A framework for community interactions under climate change

TL;DR: This work proposes a framework based on ideas from global-change biology, community ecology, and invasion biology that uses community modules to assess how species interactions shape responses to climate change.

Food security and food production systems

TL;DR: The questions for this chapter are how far climate and its change affect current food production systems and food security and the extent to which they will do so in the future.
Journal ArticleDOI

Implications of climate change for agricultural productivity in the early twenty-first century

TL;DR: This paper reviews recent literature concerning a wide range of processes through which climate change could potentially impact global-scale agricultural productivity, and presents projections of changes in relevant meteorological, hydrological and plant physiological quantities from a climate model ensemble to illustrate key areas of uncertainty.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Transposition is modulated by a diverse set of host factors in Escherichia coli and is stimulated by nutritional stress.

TL;DR: The ability to suppress this phenotype by the addition of fumarate therefore provides direct evidence that transposition occurs in response to nutritional stress.
Journal ArticleDOI

Climate change: can we predict the impacts on plant pathology and pest management?

TL;DR: Key challenges pertain to uncertainty in input variables, the difficulty in predicting biological responses in the presence of nonlinearities and thresholds, and the high likelihood of genetic adaptation to climate change.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of maize residues on the Fusarium spp. infection and deoxynivalenol (DON) contamination of wheat grain

TL;DR: Four different previous crop residues were evaluated by comparing their effectiveness in reducing crop residues from the surface of the soil and the consequent contamination and their costs and it was shown that tillage was not significant and that the major role in Fusarium spp.
Journal ArticleDOI

Establishment, Distribution, and Pathogenicity of Puccinia striiformis f. sp. tritici in South Africa.

TL;DR: Monitoring of the occurrence, spread, and the possible development of new variants of the stripe rust pathogen and the susceptibility of grass species to the pathogen revealed that rainfed wheat produced in the Western Cape, Eastern Cape and the eastern Free State, as well as irrigated wheatproduced in KwaZulu-Natal and the Free state, are most likely to be affected by stripe rust epidemics.
Related Papers (5)