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PRESS RELEASE
For immediate release
Contact: Amanda Aranowski
American Phytopathological Society
Phone: +1.651.454.7250
Web: www.apsnet.org
E-mail: aaranowski@scisoc.org
On Valentine’s Day Don’t Take Someone’s Love, or That Box of
Chocolates, for Granted
St. Paul, MN (February 5, 2001) - Making sure there’s enough chocolate in the world may seem like a
sweet-heart of a job. But it’s actually becoming quite a challenge. Five major
diseases now threaten the world’s population of cacao trees, from which
chocolate is derived. But scientists working on the problem are optimistic that
their efforts to control these diseases and create sustainable growing practices
will work.
Once a substantial business, cocoa bean production in Brazil is now only
one-fourth of what it was ten years ago, for the most part due to the invasion of a
single fungus, Crinipellis perniciosa. In West and Central Africa where
much of the world’s cocoa beans are grown, losses due to another disease,
black pod, range from 30 to 90% annually. Add to that the fact that black pod,
like many of these diseases, has features that make it difficult to control, and
you begin to understand why plant pathologists feel particularly challenged.
States John Bowers, a plant pathologist with USDA ARS in Beltsville, MD, “A
complicating factor in fighting these diseases is that many of the treatments
that work in other situations don’t work with the cacao tree. Producing cocoa
beans is very labor and equipment intensive so many of the disease management
options we would normally use are either cost-prohibitive or too time-consuming
to develop.”
Since long-term solutions such as breeding for disease resistance or
biotechnological approaches are not yet readily available, scientists have been
employing the tools they do have. They're working with an international group of
collaborators and growers to help them develop practices that discourage the
development of disease and help prevent its spread if it does occur. Their
overall objective is to work towards a sustainable cacao management system that
fits within the diverse rain forest ecosystem. The strategies being investigated
include biological control, induced disease resistance, crop sanitation,
cultural practices, and limited use of pesticides. The challenge is to integrate
all these components into a management strategy that inhibits disease
development, and at the same time preserves and protects these valuable tropical
ecosystems.
Right now scientists hope to keep these diseases in check while they work on
developing more long-range controls. “No doubt it will be a combination of
practices and new discoveries that will ultimately help us retain the health of
the world’s cacao trees,” says Bowers. “We just need more time.”
Diseases impacting world chocolate production is the subject of this month’s
feature story on the APS website. For more information, visit it at www.apsnet.org/online/feature/cacao/. The American Phytopathological Society (APS) is a non-profit,
professional scientific organization dedicated to the study and control of plant
diseases, with 5,000 members worldwide.
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