An integrated set of novel approaches to counter the emergence and proliferation of invasive and virulent soil-borne nematodes

Lead Participant: THE JAMES HUTTON INSTITUTE

Abstract

Soil-borne plant-parasitic nematodes are a biosecurity risk for global food production with an estimated annual loss of €110 billion
worldwide. Root-knot nematodes (RKN) and potato cyst nematodes (PCN) rank 1 and 2 in the Top 10 of high-impact plant-parasitic
nematodes with RKN alone accounting for ~5% of global crop losses. RKN and PCN are A2 quarantine pests or emerging species
listed on the EPPO Alert List. The two PCN species are also included in EU Commission implementing regulation 2021/2285. Recent
reports document the emergence of new RKN and PCN problems in tomato and potato cropping across Europe and beyond due to two
independent drivers: global warming and genetic selection. For decades, non-specific, environmentally harmful agrochemicals have been
applied to manage RKN and PCN. The increasing awareness about their negative impact prompted the phasing out of most nematicides.
Consequently, there is an urgent need for novel, durable control strategies that enable adequate responses by stakeholders to prevent crop
losses in the EU and beyond. NEM-EMERGE will provide a spectrum of sustainable, science-based solutions for both the conventional
and organic farming sector based on the principles of IPM, including (1) optimized crop rotations schemes including cover crops, (2)
tailored host plant resistances, and (3) optimal use of the native antagonistic potential of soils. Moreover, monitoring and risk assessment
tools will be generated to support Plant Health Authorities in decision and policy making. To ensure the adoption and implementation of
NEM-EMERGE toolsin the sector, a bottom-up co-creation process and multi-actor approach will be used based on stakeholder demands
from both the conventional and organic sector. This makes NEM-EMERGE a key driver for the transition to sustainable farming in line
with the Farm to Fork Strategy thereby contributing to the challenging targets set by the Green Deal.

Lead Participant

Project Cost

Grant Offer

THE JAMES HUTTON INSTITUTE £446,095 £ 446,095

Publications

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