Cornell University receives state grant to upgrade Golden Nematode Lab

From left to right: Michael Murphy ’17; Kathryn Boor, the Ronald P. Lynch Dean of the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences; State Sen. Thomas O’Mara, R, C-Big Flats; Melanie Wickham, executive director of Empire State Potato Growers and Walter DeJ

From left to right: Michael Murphy ’17; Kathryn Boor, the Ronald P. Lynch Dean of the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences; State Sen. Thomas O’Mara, R, C-Big Flats; Melanie Wickham, executive director of Empire State Potato Growers and Walter DeJong, associate professor in the School of Integrative Plant Science, at the announcement of new state funding to upgrade the Federal Golden Nematode Lab at Cornell (Courtesy: Matt Hayes / College of Agriculture and Life Sciences)

oktober 20, 2016

Cornell’s long-standing battle against a major potato pest is getting a $1.2 million boost in new state funding.

The destructiveness of the golden nematode, currently quarantined to eight New York counties, threatens the state’s annual $73 million potato crop. For decades, a partnership between Cornell and government scientists has kept this persistent subterranean threat in check.

A grant announced October 14 will update facilities at the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences (CALS) as Cornell ramps up eradication efforts and the breeding of new potato varieties resistant to the golden nematode.

The Federal Golden Nematode Lab at Cornell is the only research program in North America with expertise in the biology, resistance breeding and management of potato-cyst nematodes.

The golden nematode is so destructive that it can lead to total crop failure if not controlled, according to Walter DeJong, associate professor in the Plant Breeding and Genetics Section of the School of Integrative Plant Science.

The microscopic worm feeds on the roots of potatoes and other crops, dramatically reducing yields.
 

(Click to enlarge) Potato Cyst Nematode (PCN)

Potato Cyst Nematode (PCN)

Walter DeJong, associate professor in the Plant Breeding and Genetics Section of the School of Integrative Plant Science:
 

“If nematode levels are high enough, farmers harvest less than they plant. It’s remarkably devastating.”

Unlike many soil-borne pests that can be controlled by crop rotation, the golden nematode can reside in soil for up to 30 years. Fumigation attempts used until the 1970s had limited success and proved harmful to the environment.

Joint efforts undertaken by Cornell, the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) Agricultural Research Service and Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, and the New York Department of Agriculture and Markets have contained the pest to about 6,000 acres in New York. But the cysts can be spread in soil on farming equipment, attached to potatoes or other agricultural commodities, and by natural forces like water and wind, making containment efforts crucial.

Cornell research into the golden nematode has been done out of a building erected at about the same time as the U.S. Congress passed the Golden Nematode Eradication Act in 1948.

The new state funding will update equipment as the facility moves to the Dimock Laboratory on Tower Road. A new wastewater sterilization system, enhanced features to ensure isolation and additional growth chambers will add to the scientific arsenal mounted against the resilient microorganism.

Walter DeJong:
 

“These pests pose such serious threats and are so hard to control that all government have to keep it from being established.”

“Containment is the critical issue.”

"If containment failed, trading partners would almost assuredly establish embargoes to prevent transport of any crop that contains soils to prevent contaminated soil from moving across borders."

"The consequences would affect more than just potatoes: turnips, radishes, carrots, turf grass, nursery crops and any other agricultural commodity that comes in contact with soil would be barred from trade."

USDA has been leading efforts to monitor and test soil and develop the on-farm management strategies needed to keep the golden nematode contained. Additionally, Cornell has been breeding golden-nematode-resistant potato cultivars, producing 22 such varieties since the 1960s. The new facility is expected to speed development of commercially viable resistant cultivars to meet the needs of the state’s growers.

Kathryn Boor, the Ronald P. Lynch Dean of CALS, said Cornell’s research into this destructive pest fits in with the college’s pledge to protect the agricultural integrity of the state’s farms.

Kathryn Boor, the Ronald P. Lynch Dean of CALS:
 

“For 151 years, Cornell has been fulfilling its commitment as New York state’s land-grant university, and I take our commitment to New York farmers very seriously.”

“Without this critically important facility, quarantine efforts would fail and put in peril not only the state’s $73 million potato industry, but also New York farmers’ ability to ship root vegetable crops across state lines and into international markets.”

State Senator Thomas O’Mara, R, C-Big Flats:
 

“Cornell University’s efforts over the past 70 years to contain the organism, and to conduct the research and development that will always be the front line of protection for our growers and growers throughout America, have been remarkable."

"This upgraded facility will ensure that Cornell's enormously important work on behalf of one of New York’s key agricultural industries will be carried on effectively and successfully.”
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