By
Mark KinverEnvironment reporter, BBC News
A virulent pathogen that
starves olive trees poses a serious threat to EU olive production, experts have
warned.
"Major
consequences", such as reduced yields and costly control measures, would
be the outcome if it spreads to other olive producing regions.
It is already affecting
a vast area in southern Italy and, as it has numerous hosts and vectors, the
bacterium is expected to spread further.
'Major risk'
It observed that the
bacterium responsible for "rapid decline" in the olive plantations
outbreak, Xylella fastidiosa, presented "a major risk to the EU territory".
"It has the
potential to cause disease in the risk assessment area once it establishes as
hosts are present and the environmental conditions are favourable," the
risk assessment added.
"X. fastidiosa may affect several crops in Europe - such as
citrus, grapevine and stone fruit (almond, peach, plum) - but also several tree
and ornamental plants, for example oak, sycamore and oleander."
Outbreaks in North and
South America highlighted the potential severity of the pathogen.
"It can certainly
spread very quickly," explained Stephen Parnell, an epidemiologist from
the University of Salford and a member of a working group that contributed to
the assessment by the EFSA Panel on Plant Health.
"In Brazil, for
example, where the bacterium is a problem on citrus trees, it went from just a
handful of infected trees to two million infected trees in just five
years," he told BBC News.
Dr Parnell explained
that there were hundreds of plant species known to host the bacterium, many of
which occurred in Europe.
But, he added:
"There is a degree of uncertainty surrounding the epidemiological
importance of these species.
"For an epidemic,
you need the bacteria, you need vector populations, you need suitable hosts and
you need the right environmental conditions.
"All of these
things do occur in Europe, but there is some uncertainty regarding to what
extent."
Hitchhiker vectors
The outbreak in the
Puglia region was first reported in October 2013, where almond and oleander plants
also tested positive for the pathogen.
Biosecurity measures
were imposed, prohibiting the movement of propagation material from susceptible
host species from the infected area.
Although the outbreak is
now described as officially under control, Dr Parnell said concern remained
that it could spread further as a result of the long-range spread of vectors.
The risk assessment
report observed: "All xylem fluid-feeding insects in Europe are considered
to be potential vectors."
Xylem is the part of a
plant that transports water and nutrients from the root system to the rest of a
plant.
If an insect is carrying
the bacteria when it feeds on the tree, the pathogen will be able to infect the
plant's life-support system.
Dr Parnell said that
some of the potential vector species were like "hitchhikers".
"They can attach
themselves to vehicles and be spread long distances," he explained.
"They can also be transported long distances on the wind."
He added that there was
also concern that there could be new introductions from outside the EU via the
trade in plant material, which was suspected of being the most likely source of
the Puglia outbreak.
But there was another
factor in an already complex situation: "The pathogen also has a period
when the host plant can be infectious but not actually showing symptoms, making
it very difficult to detect.
"So there is a high
chance that it could come over the border and not be noticed."
In terms of controlling
the pathogen's spread, Dr Parnell said methods that worked to control outbreaks
in the Americas probably would not be as effective in Europe.
"The difficulty
with that is that although there are suitable environmental conditions, hosts
and vectors in Europe, the epidemiological significance of these factors are
not really known," he explained.
"Although we can
look at what was successful in these areas in California and Brazil, I don't
think you can directly map what worked there to Europe because there are
different environmental factors, different host populations etc."
He concluded: "Is
it fair to say that people need to learn more about the European outbreak
quickly because the likelihood of another outbreak hotspot is quite high."
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