Sign up for our daily Newsletter and stay up to date with all the latest news!

Subscribe I am already a subscriber

You are using software which is blocking our advertisements (adblocker).

As we provide the news for free, we are relying on revenues from our banners. So please disable your adblocker and reload the page to continue using this site.
Thanks!

Click here for a guide on disabling your adblocker.

Sign up for our daily Newsletter and stay up to date with all the latest news!

Subscribe I am already a subscriber

A nose for trouble – sniffing out plant pests

Invasive plant pests are threatening safe and sustainable food production. Many plant pests are transported across international borders on plants, where they can hide as stowaways. Researchers from all over Europe have joined forces to create electronic noses that can sniff out plants infected with certain pests, to prevent the pests from spreading.

Safe and sustainable food production is threatened by a variety of plant pests, many of them invasive. With a world population that is expected to reach 9.7 billion in 2050, according to the United Nations, we must prevent the loss of food and feed to pests and diseases.

Plant pests can be spread all over the world when plant material is traded. With climate change, pests can establish in new areas and cause great economic losses. International Plant Protection Convention (IPPC) and the European and Mediterranean Plant Protection Organization (EPPO) are both dedicated to protecting plants from pests and working towards a safe plant trade to prevent the spread of invasive pests. However, this is challenging, as plant pests can be difficult to detect. When traded, plants are evaluated, and seemingly healthy plants get a plant health certificate. Unfortunately, many of these plants host hidden plant pests, which are then transported across borders as stowaway passengers. When they reach new destinations, they can spread rapidly and cause great damage.

This challenge has inspired researchers from all over Europe to cooperate in PurPest, an EU project coordinated by NIBIO. The goal is to develop electronic noses that can sniff out stowaway pests in plants and thus limit their distribution.

A nose for sick plants
Andrea Ficke, NIBIO researcher, and project coordinator explains the concept of the project:

“All plants secrete volatile organic compounds (VOCs), like smells. The collection of VOCs that a plant secretes is altered as the plant is subjected to stress, such as when under attack from a plant pest. Attacks from different pests should result in different VOC profiles.”

This principle will be used to create electronic noses that can identify specific VOC profiles and connect them to certain plant pests. The electronic noses must be easy to use and give rapid and reliable results if it detects a pest.

This could prove to be a valuable tool for plant importers that must manage large quantities of plants from all over the world, with currently few ways of detecting stowaway pests. According to Ficke, only 3% of the pests that are imported with plant material are detected.

“By using electronic noses, it would be possible to detection rate to 80%.”

The electronic noses will be designed for in-field use as well. Robust electronic noses could be attached to tractors and used to detect pests that are already established in the fields. This would allow for more site-specific treatment, which could lower the need for pesticides by as much as 50%, Ficke claims.

The select few
To start with, the project aims to develop electronic noses that can detect five pests, representing oomycetes, insects, and nematodes. Most of the pests have a wide range of host plants and threaten both agriculture and forestry throughout Europe.

To be able to develop electronic noses, the volatile organic compounds secreted from plants attacked by different pests must be known. This will be achieved through controlled experiments conducted by NIBIO and other collaborating research institutes, where plants will be exposed to different pests under controlled conditions. Analyses will be performed to determine the secreted VOCs, which will be gathered in a database. The database will be open to other researchers and developers so that it can be expanded to be valid for other pests as well.

“This ensures that the technology and its uses can be developed, even after the project is concluded,” Ficke explains.

Interdisciplinary collaboration
Electronic noses alone will not solve the issue of invasive plant pests being imported with plants.

“To solve such a complex problem, we need changes in policies related to plant trade,” Ficke explains.

One of the projects’ working groups will work solely on this.

“They will work closely together with end users, such as farmers and people involved in plant trade, and stakeholders, to create policies and guidelines that are sensible and implementable.”

This is an essential part of the project, which has set a goal to improve EU policies regarding plant trade. The cooperation between technology, biology, and social sciences is essential for reducing the threat posed by invasive plant pests. By gathering expertise in these fields of research, the PurPest project can help secure sustainable food production and forestry. 

Source: nibio.no

Publication date: