Protecting plants from disease
Plants are the first step in every food chainA sequence (usually shown as a diagram) of feeding relationships between organisms, showing which organisms eat what and the movement of energy through trophic levels., and also provide habitatA place where plants, animals and microorganisms live. for many organisms. Even if they are not crop plants providing food directly, they provide many ecosystem servicesBenefits that humans receive from ecosystems, including provisions (eg clean water, food, medicines, materials), fertile soil, crop pollination, control of climate, breaking down of waste substances, and cultural benefits (eg recreation, discovery, aesthetics).. This means that humans have a responsibility to both wild and crop plants.
Controlling movement of plant material
The plants and crops in any place have evolved with the local pathogens so are able to survive. Those samepathogenMicroorganism that causes disease. can be deadly to plants in other parts of the world. This is why the movement of foods, seeds, timber, whole plants and soil is regulated. Many countries including the UK inspect these when they enter the country, and infected plant material is safely disposed of.
Monoculture versus polyculture
Many crop plants are planted close together in a monocultureGrowing one type of crop. - the aim of this is to provide enough food and make them easier to harvest. This makes them a bigger target for pathogens, which can then spread easily as plants of the same species are so close together. In polyculture different plant species are planted together. This makes it harder for the pathogen to spread.
Some crops are cloneAn organism that is genetically identical to another organism.. In an ordinary plant population there is a lot of variation, and so at least some individuals can survive infection. Some plants - such as banana plants and potato plants (even across different varieties) - are genetically identical. If a disease can kill one, it may kill them all. An example of this is when potato blight caused the Irish potato famine.
Chemical and biological control
Bananas are grown as a monoculture. As they are clones, they are all very susceptible to a particular fungus disease. Some crops are sprayed with a chemical fungicide up to 40 times a year to reduce the risk of infection. This is an example of chemical control.
In biological control a new species is introduced into an ecosystem. Pests that spread diseases can be controlled if the new species is a predator of the pest.
Crop rotation
Pathogens or their spores may remain in the soil after a crop is harvested and infect the new crop the following year. crop rotationWhen fields are used to grow the same crop in alternate years. This helps to maintain soil fertility. can help prevent this because different crops tend to be affected by different pathogens. The more different a crop is, the less likely it is to be affected by pathogens from the previous year.
Learn more about plant disease with Dr Alex Lathbridge.
Listen to the full series on 大象传媒 Sounds.