TY - JOUR
T1 - A Global Assessment of the State of Plant Health
AU - Global Plant Health Assessment Project (GPHA)
AU - Savary, Serge
AU - Andrivon, Didier
AU - Esker, Paul
AU - Frey, Pascal
AU - Hüberli, Daniel
AU - Kumar, J.
AU - McDonald, Bruce A.
AU - McRoberts, Neil
AU - Nelson, Andrew
AU - Pethybridge, Sarah
AU - Rossi, Vittorio
AU - Schreinemachers, Pepijn
AU - Willocquet, Laetitia
AU - Bove, Federica
AU - Sah, Sonam
AU - Singh, Manjari
AU - Djurle, Annika
AU - Xu, Xiangming
AU - Ojiambo, Peter
AU - Paul, Pierce
AU - Del Ponte, Emerson
AU - Kuhnem, Paulo
AU - Carmona, Marcelo
AU - Sautua, Francisco
AU - Chen, Xianming
AU - Xia, Xianchun
AU - Kang, Zhensheng
AU - Safni, Irda
AU - Castilla, Nancy P.
AU - Nguyen, Nga Thi Thu
AU - Ma, Zhanhong
AU - Wu, Boming
AU - Kumar, Lava P.
AU - Bandyopadhyay, Ranajit
AU - Ortega-Beltran, Alejandro
AU - Menkir, Abebe
AU - Hu, Xiaoping
AU - Garrett, Karen A.
AU - Andrade-Piedra, Jorge
AU - Kreuze, Jan
AU - Acuña, Ivette
AU - Kromann, Peter
AU - Davey, Triona
AU - Hausladen, Hans
AU - Legg, James Peter
AU - Fiaboe, Komi Mokpokpo
AU - Tripathi, Leena
AU - Viljoen, Altus
AU - Mahuku, George
AU - Kubiriba, Jerome
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 The American Phytopathological Society.
PY - 2023/12
Y1 - 2023/12
N2 - The Global Plant Health Assessment (GPHA) is a collective, volunteer-based effort to assemble expert opinions on plant health and disease impacts on ecosystem services based on published scientific evidence. The GPHA considers a range of forest, agricultural, and urban systems worldwide. These are referred to as (Ecoregion × Plant System), i.e., selected case examples involving keystone plants in given parts of the world. The GPHA focuses on infectious plant diseases and plant pathogens, but encompasses the abiotic (e.g., temperature, drought, and floods) and other biotic (e.g., animal pests and humans) factors associated with plant health. Among the 33 (Ecoregion × Plant System) considered, 18 are assessed as in fair or poor health, and 20 as in declining health. Much of the observed state of plant health and its trends are driven by a combination of forces, including climate change, species invasions, and human management. Healthy plants ensure (i) provisioning (food, fiber, and material), (ii) regulation (climate, atmosphere, water, and soils), and (iii) cultural (recreation, inspiration, and spiritual) ecosystem services. All these roles that plants play are threatened by plant diseases. Nearly none of these three ecosystem services are assessed as improving. Results indicate that the poor state of plant health in sub-Saharan Africa gravely contributes to food insecurity and environmental degradation. Results further call for the need to improve crop health to ensure food security in the most populated parts of the world, such as in South Asia, where the poorest of the poor, the landless farmers, are at the greatest risk. The overview of results generated from this work identifies directions for future research to be championed by a new generation of scientists and revived public extension services. Breakthroughs from science are needed to (i) gather more data on plant health and its consequences, (ii) identify collective actions to manage plant systems, (iii) exploit the phytobiome diversity in breeding programs, (iv) breed for plant genotypes with resilience to biotic and abiotic stresses, and (v) design and implement plant systems involving the diversity required to ensure their adaptation to current and growing challenges, including climate change and pathogen invasions.
AB - The Global Plant Health Assessment (GPHA) is a collective, volunteer-based effort to assemble expert opinions on plant health and disease impacts on ecosystem services based on published scientific evidence. The GPHA considers a range of forest, agricultural, and urban systems worldwide. These are referred to as (Ecoregion × Plant System), i.e., selected case examples involving keystone plants in given parts of the world. The GPHA focuses on infectious plant diseases and plant pathogens, but encompasses the abiotic (e.g., temperature, drought, and floods) and other biotic (e.g., animal pests and humans) factors associated with plant health. Among the 33 (Ecoregion × Plant System) considered, 18 are assessed as in fair or poor health, and 20 as in declining health. Much of the observed state of plant health and its trends are driven by a combination of forces, including climate change, species invasions, and human management. Healthy plants ensure (i) provisioning (food, fiber, and material), (ii) regulation (climate, atmosphere, water, and soils), and (iii) cultural (recreation, inspiration, and spiritual) ecosystem services. All these roles that plants play are threatened by plant diseases. Nearly none of these three ecosystem services are assessed as improving. Results indicate that the poor state of plant health in sub-Saharan Africa gravely contributes to food insecurity and environmental degradation. Results further call for the need to improve crop health to ensure food security in the most populated parts of the world, such as in South Asia, where the poorest of the poor, the landless farmers, are at the greatest risk. The overview of results generated from this work identifies directions for future research to be championed by a new generation of scientists and revived public extension services. Breakthroughs from science are needed to (i) gather more data on plant health and its consequences, (ii) identify collective actions to manage plant systems, (iii) exploit the phytobiome diversity in breeding programs, (iv) breed for plant genotypes with resilience to biotic and abiotic stresses, and (v) design and implement plant systems involving the diversity required to ensure their adaptation to current and growing challenges, including climate change and pathogen invasions.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85181029487&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=85181029487&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1094/PDIS-01-23-0166-FE
DO - 10.1094/PDIS-01-23-0166-FE
M3 - Article
C2 - 37172970
AN - SCOPUS:85181029487
SN - 0191-2917
VL - 107
SP - 3649
EP - 3665
JO - Plant disease
JF - Plant disease
IS - 12
ER -