Growing risk? The potential impact of plant disease on land use and the UK rural economy
Lead Research Organisation:
University of Warwick
Department Name: Warwick HRI
Abstract
Abstracts are not currently available in GtR for all funded research. This is normally because the abstract was not required at the time of proposal submission, but may be because it included sensitive information such as personal details.
Publications
Jeger MJ
(2007)
Modelling disease spread and control in networks: implications for plant sciences.
in The New phytologist
Pautasso M
(2008)
Epidemic threshold and network structure: The interplay of probability of transmission and of persistence in small-size directed networks
in Ecological Complexity
Jeger MJ
(2008)
Plant disease and global change--the importance of long-term data sets.
in The New phytologist
Xu X
(2009)
Spatio-temporal analysis of an invasive plant pathogen ( Phytophthora ramorum ) in England and Wales
in Ecography
Moslonka-Lefebvre M
(2009)
Disease spread in small-size directed networks: epidemic threshold, correlation between links to and from nodes, and clustering.
in Journal of theoretical biology
Harwood T
(2009)
Epidemiological risk assessment using linked network and grid based modelling: Phytophthora ramorum and Phytophthora kernoviae in the UK
in Ecological Modelling
Mike Jeger (Author)
(2010)
Plant health threats to agriculture from globalisation and climate change
Damian Maye (Co-Investigator)
(2010)
Growing risk? : growers' perceptions of plant disease risk in the UK
Dehnen-Schmutz K
(2010)
The role of regulatory mechanisms for control of plant diseases and food security-case studies from potato production in Britain
in Food Security
Dehnen-Schmutz K
(2010)
Structural change in the international horticultural industry: Some implications for plant health
in Scientia Horticulturae
Pautasso M
(2010)
The number of links to and from the starting node as a predictor of epidemic size in small-size directed networks
in Ecological Complexity
MacLeod A
(2010)
Evolution of the international regulation of plant pests and challenges for future plant health
in Food Security
Pautasso M
(2010)
Plant health and global change--some implications for landscape management.
in Biological reviews of the Cambridge Philosophical Society
Coe, Neil; Jones, Andrew
(2010)
The Economic Geography of the UK
Pautasso M
(2010)
Disease spread in small-size directed trade networks: the role of hierarchical categories
in Journal of Applied Ecology
Chadfield V
(2011)
Phytophthora ramorum in England and Wales: which environmental variables predict county disease incidence?
in Forest Pathology
Wilkinson K
(2011)
Infectious diseases of animals and plants: an interdisciplinary approach.
in Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences
Mills P
(2011)
Integrating natural and social science perspectives on plant disease risk, management and policy formulation.
in Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences
Moslonka-Lefebvre M
(2011)
Networks in plant epidemiology: from genes to landscapes, countries, and continents.
in Phytopathology
Michael Spackman (Author)
(2012)
Growing risk? : grower-agronomist relationships and plant disease management in the UK potato and wheat sectors
Maye D
(2012)
Rationalising risk: grower strategies to manage plant disease in the UK wheat and potato sectors
in The Geographical Journal
Ilbery B
(2012)
Plant disease risk and grower-agronomist perceptions and relationships: An analysis of the UK potato and wheat sectors
in Applied Geography
Maye D
(2012)
Governing Biosecurity in a Neoliberal World: Comparative Perspectives from Australia and the United Kingdom
in Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space
Pautasso M
(2013)
Plant health challenges for a sustainable land use and rural economy.
in CABI Reviews
Ilbery, BW
(2013)
Risk and Plant Disease Management: Supply Chain Perspectives in the UK Wheat Sector
in Journal of Rural and Community Development
Ilbery B
(2013)
Risk perception, crop protection and plant disease in the UK wheat sector
in Geoforum
Pautasso M
(2014)
Network epidemiology and plant trade networks.
in AoB PLANTS
Shaw MW
(2014)
Networks and plant disease management: concepts and applications.
in Annual review of phytopathology
Douma J
(2016)
Pathway models for analysing and managing the introduction of alien plant pests?an overview and categorization
in Ecological Modelling
Description | The aim of this project was to take an inter-disciplinary approach to determining the potential impacts of plant diseases, affecting both food and non-food crops/plants, on land use and the UK rural economy. Overall, the project has provided a framework for taking an inclusive approach to risk analysis, regulation and governance for plant diseases and scenario planning to help inform the national response to plant disease epidemics. |
Exploitation Route | i. The project team have built and interacted with an extensive network of stakeholders taken from all levels of the production supply chain, processing, retailing, support industries, NGOs, Government Departments, research organisations, other RELU projects and the general public. More than 100 academic and non-academic stakeholders have attended a series of workshops run by the team, including one workshop that brought together practitioners, academics and policy makers from both animal and plant disease constituencies. ii. Initial work focused on creating a sound project framework based on a review of relevant literature and an analysis of historical data on UK plant epidemics. This created appropriate UK crop maps, examined structural change in each sector since 1950s, established disease typologies (food/non-food crop, based on modes of spread, whether largely through human activity in trade, or more natural dispersal mechanisms) and developed an overall conceptual framework for risks to plant health and governance. iii. Using members of a project Advisory Board, scenarios were built that examined the impact of plant diseases (food and non-food) on land use and the UK rural economy. Following on from this, in depth interviews in each of three food sectors (potato, wheat and mushrooms) were conducted with sixty eight key 'actors' in these sectors to understand how risks are measured, perceived, interpreted and managed throughout the production chain for specific diseases. iv. Of these, 60 semi-structured in-depth interviews were conducted with growers and other supply chain actors in the cereal and potato sectors. Outputs suggest that plant disease is a controllable production risk for growers. Wheat and potato growers favour high-yielding varieties demanded by millers and supermarkets respectively, even if risk is increased. This situation could change if Directive 91/414, with its focus on 'hazard' rather than 'risk', is activated in its current proposed form, emphasising the importance of 'risk as politics'. Disease is not considered a major risk to 'downstream' actors in the wheat and potato supply chains. For them, key risks revolve around volatile prices and supplies. Initiation of contracts between contractor and grower ensures that most risk is passed to growers, even though key downstream actors influence growers' choice of varieties. v. Choice experiments (CE) using a sample of 323 members of the public with respect to and willingness to pay (WTP) for reductions in pesticides for bread, potatoes and a rose bush as payment vehicles reveal the public are WTP a small premium to avert human illness and to stop the decline of bird species by reducing pesticide use on potatoes and roses respectively vi. A model was created investigating the effect of crop consultants wrongly estimating the fungicide dose response curve in cereal production in combination with attitude to risk. We were able to investigate which aspect of the consultants' decision-making process (disease prediction or attitude to risk) has the largest effect on yield and financial losses. vii. The project has produced 14 peer reviewed papers to date (with 8 more close to submission), two book chapters and we have presented work at 18 conferences across the world. More than 10 working papers have been produced. Our work has been published in the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, featured in The Garden magazine (circulation 365,000) and one of our papers highlighted by the EU Commission 'Science for Environment Policy' distributed to policy makers across Europe (circulation list 12000). viii. Two Policy and Practice notes have been produced from the work of the project on Policy-making for animal and plant disease: a changing landscape? and Plant disease risk, management and policy formulation. ix. Stakeholder workshops organised by this project have been the first to bring together policy makers responsible for animal and plant diseases. In addition, three work shadowing exercises were undertaken by this project team which exposed the NFU, Food Chain Centre and Defra to interdisciplinary research for plant diseases. x. This project builds on existing and emerging approaches to formulating policies governing the spread of plant pathogens through identification of effective practice. We have examined why these approaches may be beneficial and the importance of inter/multi-disciplinarity in achieving consensus. We have examined governance, risk and stakeholder engagement as concepts central to effective policy creation. Data have been sourced through a series of workshops and interviews involving an extensive range of stakeholders from across the production/food supply chain. |
Sectors | Agriculture Food and Drink Environment Government Democracy and Justice |
Description | • A session was organised at the Festival of Science conference in Birmingham in 2010 at which two papers form the project were presented to a general public (non-academic) audience. • One day meeting with senior staff from Bayer Crop Science was organised in 2009 at which information on risk was exchanged. • Workshop was organised (in conjunction with the RELU GOLD team) to bring animal and plant disease stakeholders together at the Innovation Centre in Reading. • Team members have presented findings from the project at approximately 18 conferences/workshops and published 14 papers and book chapters (with a further 8 in advanced stages of preparation). |
First Year Of Impact | 2009 |
Sector | Agriculture, Food and Drink,Environment,Government, Democracy and Justice |
Impact Types | Policy & public services |
Description | Living With Environmental Change: Pathways to Policy |
Amount | £47,761 (GBP) |
Organisation | Department For Environment, Food And Rural Affairs (DEFRA) |
Sector | Public |
Country | United Kingdom |
Start | 02/2013 |
End | 09/2013 |
Description | Tree health and plant biosecurity |
Amount | £261,300 (GBP) |
Organisation | Department For Environment, Food And Rural Affairs (DEFRA) |
Sector | Public |
Country | United Kingdom |
Start | 02/2012 |
End | 08/2014 |