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New ARS Projects

To meet the crisis that elimination of methyl bromide will impose on U.S. agriculture, the Agricultural Research Service has redirected funds from other research programs to create five new full-time positions for developing viable alternatives. One of these positions is located at Fort Pierce, Florida; three are in California, at Fresno, Davis, and Salinas; and one is at Wenatchee, Washington.

These positions have been filled by scientists who are backed by years of dedicated training and research in plant pathology and physiology--all essential in finding ways to keep our agriculture productive and competitive in world markets.

FLORIDA

ARS plant physiologist David Patterson is addressing the problem of weeds. Patterson recently transferred from the ARS Plant Physiology Research Unit at Raleigh, North Carolina, to the Fort Pierce, Florida, future site of the ARS Horticultural Research Laboratory at Orlando. He received his undergraduate degree from North Carolina State University and master's and Ph.D. degrees from Duke University.

Patterson's assignment involves the biology and control of nutsedges, weeds that are rampant wherever vegetables are grown. Methyl bromide is currently the most effective control for yellow and purple nutsedge. Purple nutsedge is known as the world's worst weed.

"Neither of these species produces much viable seed, so they must move more slowly than other weeds to infest vegetable crops," Patterson says. "We'll study the biology and epidemiology of these pernicious weeds, hoping to find ways to slow their spread in the field and reduce their emergence."

He expects to evaluate cultural practices, composting, and different types of mulches that might offer weed control.

CALIFORNIA

ARS plant pathologist Cynthia G. Eayre has a research background in soilborne pathogens of horticultural crops. After receiving a Ph.D. from North Carolina State University, she held postdoctoral positions at the University of Florida and the ARS Crop Quality and Fruit Insects Research Unit in Weslaco, Texas.

Now assigned to the ARS Postharvest Quality and Genetics Research Unit at Fresno, California, Eayre will work on biologically based alternatives to methyl bromide as a soil fumigant for strawberries and stone fruits.

"We will try to identify the causes of strawberry root rot so we can reproduce the disease in control experiments," Eayre says. She and colleagues will test beneficial bacteria--recently found to ward off disease in cantaloupe--to try to induce plant resistance to the rot. She plans to work with the ARS Water Management Unit to try drip-trickle irrigation as a delivery system for this and other control agents.

Eayre is particularly interested in root knot nematode resistance in peaches and in working with a fungus, Hirsutella, that attacks the ring nematode, another pest of stone fruit. She plans trials of combinations of biological control agents and chemical treatments.

ARS recently added plant pathologist Greg Browne to the research team at the Crops Pathology and Genetics Laboratory in Davis, California. Browne received a Ph.D. in plant pathology from the University of California at Davis and later worked for UC's Cooperative Extension, specializing in diseases of vegetable crops.

At the ARS-Davis lab, Browne will investigate ways to control soilborne diseases that affect fruit and nut trees and grapes. His research will help develop methyl bromide alternatives.

"An important part of my program will be to find and evaluate genetic resistance to important soilborne pathogens in rootstocks of fruit and nut trees like peaches, almonds, and walnuts," he says. "Also, we need to learn more about the biology and control of soilborne pathogens like Phytophthora that affect plant vigor and productivity. We'll need this kind of information to effectively integrate methyl bromide alternatives."

Browne says cultural, genetic, and chemical strategies will all play important roles in finding methyl bromide replacements.

Plant pathologist Frank Martin will tackle the problem of finding alternatives to methyl bromide from an ecological perspective. Martin is now part of the research team at the ARS Crop Improvement and Protection Research Unit at Salinas, California. He received his Ph.D. degree in plant pathology from the University of California, Berkeley, and came to ARS from the University of Florida where he worked as an assistant professor on the ecology, biocontrol, and genetics of fungal soilborne pathogens as they affect a wide range of vegetable crops.

At Salinas, Martin's research objectives include investigating the ecology and biology of soilborne pathogens and developing biocontrol strategies from an ecological perspective. In addition, he will continue research on controlling damping-off of vegetable transplants using a biocontrol agent developed while at the University of Florida. Damping-off, caused by fungi, is a serious disease of seeds and seedlings that can kill young plants as they emerge from the soil.

WASHINGTON

Plant pathologist Mark Mazzola has a background in forestry and plant pathology research and received both undergraduate and master's degrees from the University of Vermont and a Ph.D. in plant pathology from Washington State University.

From a temporary research position studying soilborne pathogens of wheat with ARS at Pullman, Washington, Mazzola was recently assigned to work full-time at the Tree Fruit Research Laboratory in Wenatchee, seeking biologically based alternatives for methyl bromide as a soil fumigant.

"My concern is with an old phenomenon--apple replant disease--that to date hasn't been very well characterized," he says. "In the absence of methyl bromide, growers and nurserymen can lose up to 20-30 percent of new orchard plantings to this disease."

Methyl bromide is now used to fumigate soil to eliminate potential soilborne pathogens in orchards that are being renovated by removing old trees and planting new apple varieties. It's difficult to treat this disease with other materials, Mazolla says, because the exact cause is not known and may vary between geographic regions.

While seeking a causal agent, Mazzola plans to investigate the potential role of fungal pathogens in apple replant disease and evaluate biological agents to control it. He is looking at the biological control capabilities of Trichoderma, a common soilborne fungus that has been used experimentally to control other plant diseases.


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Last Updated: October 25, 1996
     
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