 
Beating the Blight of Potato Famine
10 September 2003
Potato blight causes worldwide losses of £3 billion every
year, but scientists are only just discovering how it infects
potato plants, according to research due to be presented tomorrow,
Thursday 11 September 2003, at the Society for General Microbiology's
meeting at UMIST in Manchester.
"In the past potato blight, Phytophthora infestans, was
always thought to be a member of the fungal family, but now we
know that it is more closely related to golden brown algae, which
are commonly known as kelp or seaweed," says Dr Pieter van
West from the University of Aberdeen, "This means that potato
blight may have different mechanisms for infecting plants from
the way a fungus typically attacks."
According to the scientists, if they can find the precise molecular
methods the blight uses to infect plants, and investigate the
properties of the infection structures, then they may be able
to target it. This will allow them to develop new disease control
and resistance methods without necessarily having to spray the
crop with harmful chemicals.
"Potatoes are the world's fourth most important crop plant,
so global food security relies on effective control of infestations
of potato blight," says Dr van West. "We urgently need
to develop alternative crop control measures, including biological
control and environmentally friendlier chemicals. Or perhaps even
better, we may be able to develop resistant crop varieties through
conventional breeding or GM techniques."
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