EDIT:Este post foi escrito no simpósio como aconteceu. Agora foi editado para corrigir alguns erros cometidos durante o trabalho rápido, corrigir links e adicionar tweets de outras pessoas no simpósio.
Simon Hiscock abriu o simpósio, com um alô, e um pouco mais de explicação sobre a revista. Ele destacou as declarações de impacto social, breves declarações que dizem por que você deve se importar com um determinado jornal. Esses curtos parágrafos dizem como a pesquisa afetará o mundo em que você vive. Paul Wilkin e Alexandre Antonelli seguiram, ambos enfatizando a importância das plantas para a ação humana. É um foco diferente das típicas reuniões de botânica, onde tudo gira em torno das plantas (ou patógenos ou polinizadores, etc…)
#ppp19 não é um casamento feliz entre plantas e pessoas no presente. I em 5 plantas ameaçadas de extinção. As coisas têm que mudar. Antonelli #plantas#extinção
The symposium has opened with a keynote lecture from Nicola Spence of DEFRA, the Department for Environment, Food & Rural Affairs, How the global threat of pests and diseases impacts plants, people and the planet. These are the kind of problems that PPP has already been covering. Fogell and colleagues have discussed how two rapidly-evolving orchid viruses don’t seem to have undergone much change, since their first observation. If these viruses are pretty much the same everywhere, then infected orchids must be traded pretty rapidly. That’s a biosecurity problem.
The combination of science, politics and social action is a problem Nicola Spence tackles. One example is her work on the strawberry disease, Colletotrichum acutatum, a fungal infection. There were a combination of problems, but one recurring issue was the repeated import of infected plants. In the paper, Calleja and colleagues say, “The effectiveness of phytosanitary procedures is limited when the sector is importing large numbers of plants from nurseries that have a track record of selling infested plant material, even if they are accompanied by a plant passport.” So there’s a need for combining all three approaches.
Spence said that there’s an unprecedented volume of plant trade and the UK is a net importer. One challenge is that there’s an increase in demand for mature trees. There’s all sorts of places for pathogens to hide. How do you search soil in volume for a few microbes? Firewood is another problem I hadn’t realised was a problem. Pests lodge in firewood, people take firewood when camping, and they like to go camping where the pest-borne diseases aren’t visible yet.
Some sources are unexpected to Nicola Spence, such as the haunted headboard. There was a mysterious sound that could not be located. Lots of people tried to work out what the problem was. When Spence’s team found it, she was able to diagnose the problem as larvae of Asian longhorn beetles. The wood from reputable manufacturers is hidden under upholstery and out of mind.
DEFRA has now set up the UK Plant Health Risk Register, following Ash dieback, of which more later in the meeting. They’ve registered over a thousand risks, but the rate of new risks is falling, so this suggests that the register is building a better picture of risks out there.
They’ve made estimates of the value of plant health to society, because money is a score society understand for importances. The estimates of the value at risk £9bn from maintaining healthy crops and forestry. £20bn in plants in food and drink. The asset value of trees and woods £175bn.
That sounds grim, “a cost of everything, but value of nothing” approach. But Spence has also said there are social impacts that are of value, even if they don’t get noticed. One example of many she gives is social prescription. Getting people out into nature can reduce stress, and there are knock-on effects on health and community.
Nicola Spence.
Urban cooling, a matter close to my heart over the past few weeks is another benefit she mentions. There might be more of this later on in the symposium too. I’ve looked through the poster abstracts this morning, and I’m slightly annoyed that I couldn’t find more time earlier. There are a few urban agriculture posters in there that I’d like to see.
Having set up the benefits, Nicola Spence, turned to problems, starting with ash dieback. It arrived earlier than thought. “Why didn’t we notice?” she asked. It says something about how we ‘manage’ woodland. Ash dieback could cost £16bn over 100 years, in terms of safety hazards need to fell trees and the loss of biodiversity. This is followed up with more on Emerald Ash Borer. Ash is having a terrible time, and Spence has said that we haven’t really valued Ash until we’re at risk of losing a lot of it.
With more threats, it risked becoming a depressing talk, but thankfully Spence highlighted action you can take. There are preventative adverts, but also participatory activities, including citizen science such the Observatree. They’ve also been at Chelsea with their Resilience garden, to raise awareness in a positive way.
You can follow Nicola Spence on Twitter @plantchief.
Pode a investigação sobre razas locais trazer-nos uma maior compreensão sobre as possíveis características que permitiriam aumentar a tolerância à salinidade nos cultivos?
Los efectos del cambio climático, la frecuencia de incendios y la defaunación, actuando em conjunto, afectan a estrutura y función de la sabana brasileña.