As part of a nationwide effort to protect crop plants and agricultural
ecosystems against plant pests and diseases, introduced accidentally or
through acts of bioterrorism, the University
of California, Davis, has been designated to host a western regional
surveillance and diagnostics network.
A $900,000 grant from the U.S. Department
of Agriculture will fund a new Western Center for Plant Disease and
Pest Surveillance and Detection, coordinated by UC Davis' College
of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences. The center will work with
partners throughout the western United States to establish a network for
detecting and diagnosing plant-health problems.
"Western agriculture provides most of the fresh fruits and vegetables
consumed in the United States," said Neal
Van Alfen, dean of the College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences.
"We look forward to collaborating with other academic institutions
as well as federal, state and private agencies to safeguard this vital component
of the nation's food supply."
The UC Davis center will oversee collaboration within the new Western
Region Plant Pest and Disease Diagnostics Surveillance Network, which will
include Alaska, Arizona, California, Hawaii, Idaho, New Mexico, Nevada,
Oregon, Utah, Washington and the U.S. territories in the South Pacific.
Director of the new campus center and diagnostic network will be Richard Bostock,
professor and chair of the UC Davis Department of Plant Pathology.
"The Western region represents a tremendous diversity in crops,
cropping systems and climates," Bostock said. "Establishing an
effective network for monitoring, detecting and diagnosing plant pests and
diseases will be a challenging, but vital task."
In addition to coordinating the new network, UC Davis has several facilities
and programs that will contribute to network activities. These include the
campus herbarium, a collection of dried plant specimens; the UC Davis-based
Western Region Pest Management Center,
funded by the U.S. Department of Agriculture; and the new Western
Institute for Food Safety and Security, administered by the UC Davis School of Veterinary Medicine
and College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences.
The newly established network will concentrate on linking the personnel,
information systems and databases at diagnostic laboratories in each state
throughout the region in order to better track the health of crops or the
progression of a disease or insect outbreak. There will be a concentrated
effort to provide more timely diagnostic information to the agricultural
agents and specialists who must deal with pest or disease problems at the
local level. The network also will work to upgrade equipment and other resources
at the various diagnostic labs.
Nationally, a comprehensive voice, video and data communications infrastructure
will be established to provide early detection and diagnostic capabilities
for plant disease and pest concerns. In the Western region, each state will
have a designated "duty officer" to receive notification of potential
problems, and the network will be linked via video conferencing systems.
The network also will provide training opportunities for agricultural
producers, pesticide applicators, seed-certification specialists and crop
consultants to better equip them to recognize and report any irregularities.
The western regional center at UC Davis will take the lead in providing
Web-based reference materials to aid in the detection and diagnosis of disease
and pest problems.