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      Risk‐based management of invading plant disease

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          Summary

          • Effective control of plant disease remains a key challenge. Eradication attempts often involve removal of host plants within a certain radius of detection, targeting asymptomatic infection. Here we develop and test potentially more effective, epidemiologically motivated, control strategies, using a mathematical model previously fitted to the spread of citrus canker in Florida.

          • We test risk‐based control, which preferentially removes hosts expected to cause a high number of infections in the remaining host population. Removals then depend on past patterns of pathogen spread and host removal, which might be nontransparent to affected stakeholders. This motivates a variable radius strategy, which approximates risk‐based control via removal radii that vary by location, but which are fixed in advance of any epidemic.

          • Risk‐based control outperforms variable radius control, which in turn outperforms constant radius removal. This result is robust to changes in disease spread parameters and initial patterns of susceptible host plants. However, efficiency degrades if epidemiological parameters are incorrectly characterised.

          • Risk‐based control including additional epidemiology can be used to improve disease management, but it requires good prior knowledge for optimal performance. This focuses attention on gaining maximal information from past epidemics, on understanding model transferability between locations and on adaptive management strategies that change over time.

          Abstract

          See also the Commentary on this article by Vicent & Blasco, 214: 905–908 .

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          Most cited references51

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          Aerial dispersal of pathogens on the global and continental scales and its impact on plant disease.

          Some of the most striking and extreme consequences of rapid, long-distance aerial dispersal involve pathogens of crop plants. Long-distance dispersal of fungal spores by the wind can spread plant diseases across and even between continents and reestablish diseases in areas where host plants are seasonally absent. For such epidemics to occur, hosts that are susceptible to the same pathogen genotypes must be grown over wide areas, as is the case with many modern crops. The strongly stochastic nature of long-distance dispersal causes founder effects in pathogen populations, such that the genotypes that cause epidemics in new territories or on cultivars with previously effective resistance genes may be atypical. Similar but less extreme population dynamics may arise from long-distance aerial dispersal of other organisms, including plants, viruses, and fungal pathogens of humans.
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            Current epidemiological understanding of citrus Huanglongbing .

            Huanglongbing (HLB) is the most destructive citrus pathosystem worldwide. Previously known primarily from Asia and Africa, it was introduced into the Western Hemisphere in 2004. All infected commercial citrus industries continue to decline owing to inadequate current control methods. HLB increase and regional spatial spread, related to vector populations, are rapid compared with other arboreal pathosystems. Disease dynamics result from multiple simultaneous spatial processes, suggesting that psyllid vector transmission is a continuum from local area to very long distance. Evolutionarily, HLB appears to have originated as an insect endosymbiont that has moved into plants. Lack of exposure of citrus to the pathogen prior to approximately 100 years ago did not provide sufficient time for development of resistance. A prolonged incubation period and regional dispersal make eradication nonviable. Multiple asymptomatic infections per symptomatic tree, incomplete systemic distribution within trees, and prolonged incubation period make detection difficult and greatly complicate disease control.
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              Global food security: challenges and policies.

              Global food security will remain a worldwide concern for the next 50 years and beyond. Recently, crop yield has fallen in many areas because of declining investments in research and infrastructure, as well as increasing water scarcity. Climate change and HIV/AIDS are also crucial factors affecting food security in many regions. Although agroecological approaches offer some promise for improving yields, food security in developing countries could be substantially improved by increased investment and policy reforms.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                njc1001@cam.ac.uk
                Journal
                New Phytol
                New Phytol
                10.1111/(ISSN)1469-8137
                NPH
                The New Phytologist
                John Wiley and Sons Inc. (Hoboken )
                0028-646X
                1469-8137
                28 March 2017
                May 2017
                : 214
                : 3 , Featured papers on ‘Tropical plants and ecosystem function’ ( doiID: 10.1111/nph.2017.214.issue-3 )
                : 1317-1329
                Affiliations
                [ 1 ] Department of Plant SciencesUniversity of Cambridge Downing Street Cambridge CB2 3EAUK
                [ 2 ] School of Environment and Life SciencesUniversity of Salford Manchester M5 4WTUK
                [ 3 ]USDA Agricultural Research Service 2001 South Rock Road Fort Pierce FL 34945USA
                Author notes
                [*] [* ] Author for correspondence:

                Nik J. Cunniffe

                Tel: +44 0 1223 333954

                Email: njc1001@ 123456cam.ac.uk

                Article
                NPH14488
                10.1111/nph.14488
                5413851
                28370154
                9a8abb2a-ef20-4f02-a617-e35a84ad5d10
                © 2017 The Authors. New Phytologist © 2017 New Phytologist Trust

                This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 20 December 2016
                : 19 January 2017
                Page count
                Figures: 5, Tables: 2, Pages: 13, Words: 10654
                Funding
                Funded by: USDA‐APHIS Farm Bill
                Funded by: USDA‐APHIS
                Categories
                Full Paper
                Research
                Full Papers
                Custom metadata
                2.0
                nph14488
                May 2017
                Converter:WILEY_ML3GV2_TO_NLMPMC version:5.0.9 mode:remove_FC converted:03.05.2017

                Plant science & Botany
                adaptive control,citrus canker,disease management,eradication,risk‐based control,stakeholders,stochastic epidemic model

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