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PRESS RELEASE
For immediate release
Contact: Amy Steigman
American Phytopathological Society
Phone: +1.651.454.7250
Web: www.apsnet.org
E-mail: asteigman@scisoc.org
Disease-Resistant Papaya Saves Hawaiian Papaya Industry
St. Paul, Minn. (August 20, 2004) – A new papaya, genetically resistant to
papaya ringspot virus (PRSV), has rescued the Hawaiian papaya industry and may
have the potential to do the same in other papaya-growing regions of the world,
say plant pathologists with The American Phytopathological Society (APS).
“In 1992, Hawaii’s papaya industry faced economic disaster when PRSV was
discovered in the Puna District of the Hawaii Island where 95 percent of the
state’s papaya was grown,” said Dennis Gonsalves, plant pathologist with the
USDA's Agricultural Research Service at the U.S. Pacific Basin Agricultural
Research Center, Hilo, HI. By 1995, PRSV was widespread in Puna and the industry
was in a crisis situation. PRSV rapidly spreads when aphids (small insects) pick
up the virus on their mouths while feeding on infected plants and continue to
feed on healthy plants.
In the late 1980s, plant pathologists began to develop transgenic papayas
resistant to PRSV and the disease-resistant papaya was commercially released in
May 1998.
“Today, we are proud to say that the transgenic papaya has fulfilled the hope of
the Hawaiian papaya industry to control PRSV and to restore the supply of papaya
to nearly the level existing before PRSV entered Puna in 1992,” said Gonsalves.
The resistance of the transgenic papaya allowed farmers to directly reclaim
their farms without first clearing their land of all infected papaya trees. The
percentage of Hawaii’s fresh papaya production produced in Puna has risen from a
low of 65 percent in 1999 to 84 percent in 2002.
Since PRSV is a worldwide problem on papaya, other countries have showed
interest in developing the technology for their use. “Due to its success, the
transgenic papaya has often been referred to as the model for the use of
biotechnology to help agriculture,” said Gonsalves.
More on this subject can be found in this month’s APS feature article at
www.apsnet.org/online/feature/ringspot/. The American Phytopathological
Society (APS) is a non-profit, professional scientific organization dedicated to
the study and management of plant disease with 5,000 members worldwide.
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