Climate change will increase crop disease risk - study
Photo / File Climate change could lead to greater crop yields at high latitudes, although this may be offset by an increased risk of crop infection by pathogens, according to a study published in Nature Climate Change . Food security is a continuous concern as the global population expands, arable land is reduced and the threat of climate change increases. Climate change-induced losses to global crop production can occur either directly, for example as a result of drought, or indirectly, including via the impact of plant pathogens. Although plant pathogens represent a major threat to crop production, little is known about how climate change will impact their distribution and abundance. In the study, Daniel Bebber and colleagues modelled the production of four major commodity crops (maize, wheat, soybean and rice), as well as eight additional temperate and tropical crops, under future climate scenarios over the twenty-first century. The authors predicted that, overall, the yield of most of these crops will increase at high latitudes, such as in North America and parts of Eurasia. However, they also suggested that temperature-dependent infection risk from 80 fungal and oomycete (fungi-like) plant pathogens would increase at high latitudes. Major shifts in species composition within pathogen communities may additionally occur in some regions, such as the United States, Europe and China. The authors concluded that potential increases in pathogen burden highlight a potential major risk to food security, reinforcing the need for careful crop management. In a Nature News & Views piece , plant disease expert Diane G. O. Saunders said this was troubling news for the regions most at risk, and wrote that it could lead to more epidemics like the Irish potato famine of the 1840s. Phil Duncan, Finn Ross, Corina Jordan and Matt Holden.