Sustainable potato production across the EU could be under threat from potato cyst nematodes (PCN) and free living nematodes (FLN) without a comprehensive review of sampling and management options.
This is the message from Dr Wilbert Flier, Nematicide Product Development Manager, DuPont Crop Protection Europe, Middle East and Africa, who says his company fully backs the recent call by the EFSA Panel on Plant Health’s for an EU-wide survey to determine the distribution of Globodera rostochiensis and Globodera pallida. DuPont is also encouraging Member States to adopt a full IPM approach to ensure responsible and appropriate management practices are put in place.
According to the EFSA report, G. rostochiensis is present in all EU Member States, whereas G. pallida is present in all Member States except Denmark, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania and Slovakia. It can be concluded that almost a century after they were first reported both PCN species have become well established within the EU. “Free living nematodes are also widespread in most agricultural soils,” adds Dr Flier. “The quality and yield of potato crops are not sustainable in the presence of large populations of plant parasitic nematodes.”
Dr Flier stresses the importance of responsible IPM practices that include consistent soil sampling to correctly identify nematode species and population levels, extending rotations, cultural measures such as growing tolerant and/or resistant cultivars and, where appropriate, responsible use of nematicides, to ensure continued and sustainable potato production.
“It is imperative that the strategy of only producing seed potatoes in fields free from PCN remains in force. However, where full IPM is adopted, it is arguably time for a relaxation of the quarantine rules in countries that do not allow growers to produce commercial ware crops where nematodes have been identified,” advises Dr Flier. “We believe these rules can dissuade growers from soil sampling, which in certain situations can make an existing nematode problem much worse,” he adds.
Nematodes damage crops by direct feeding, transmitting viruses and facilitating bacterial and fungal infections
Source: DuPont