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ASA Conference Tackles Rust and the Risk of Soy
Imports
January 8, 2004... Saint Louis, Missouri... More
than 200 soybean producers, scientists and industry experts participated
in a Soybean Rust Conference to learn more about the threat of Asian
soybean rust and measures being taken to safeguard the United States
from this damaging crop disease. The conference, hosted by the American
Soybean Association (ASA), also provided growers with information on the
approval status and registration of fungicide products to combat the
disease, the identification and detection methods for soybean rust, and
the steps being taken to develop rust-resistance soybean varieties.
The conference was conducted in cooperation with the
United States Department of Agriculture and was sponsored by BASF
Corporation, Bayer CropScience, Dow AgroSciences, Sipcam Agro USA and
Syngenta Crop Protection.
"Soybean rust has the potential to devastate the
U.S. soybean industry," said ASA President Ron Heck, a soybean
producer from Perry, Iowa. "We must work to prevent the accidental
introduction of soybean rust associated with imports or travelers, and a
potential outbreak via wind-borne spores. With possible yield losses of
80 or even 90 percent, rust is one of the most pressing issues facing
farmers this year."
Soybean rust attacks the foliage of a soybean plant
causing the leaves to drop early, which inhibits pod setting and reduces
yield. The amount of damage depends on how early in the growth of the
soybean plant the infection occurs.
"ASA has undertaken a series of actions designed
to safeguard the U.S. soybean crop," Heck said. "This kind of
concerted effort on behalf of soybean farmers is what ASA is here to do,
and that’s why membership in the ASA is so important."
Conference speakers included United Soybean Board
Production Chair Brian Hieser, who discussed checkoff-funded efforts
concerning rust; Mary Palm from USDA/APHIS provided an overview of the
biology of soybean rust, both its pathogen and disease; and Morris Bonde
from USDA/ARS talked about past and present research on soybean rust at
the USDA/ARS Plant Disease Containment Facility at Fort Detrick, in
Frederick, Maryland.
Glen Hartman and Monte Miles from the National
Soybean Research Center at the University of Illinois Urbana/Champaign
talked about USDA’s breeding for resistance efforts at the national
cooperative, contract research, and international levels.
Robert L. Griffin from USDA/APHIS, Center for Plant
Health Science and Technology, talked about assessing the risks of
soybean rust introduction associated with trade, followed by X.B. Yang,
Iowa State University, on the natural pathways for the spread of soybean
rust. Todd Topp, a U.S./Brazilian farmer, talked about farmers’
experience with soybean rust in Brazil.
Allison Tally, Syngenta Crop Protection; Jim
Bloomberg, Bayer CropScience; Ted Bardinelli, BASF Corporation; David
Ouimette, Dow AgroSciences; and John French, Sipcam Agro USA, provided
an update on the efficacy and availability of fungicide products.
Martin Draper from South Dakota State University
reviewed Section 18 approval status and registration of fungicides, and
Bob Tomerlin of the Environmental Protection Agency talked about the
registration outlook for various fungicide products. Ray Hammerschmidt,
North Central Plant Diagnostic Network, Michigan State University,
presented an overview of National Plant Diagnostic Network and its role
to combat rust.
One of the topics discussed at the conference was the
immediate concern that rust could be transported through commercial
soybean shipments from South America, where Asian rust has already
caused significant crop losses. Because imported soybeans are allowed to
contain up to 2 percent foreign material that mostly consists of pieces
of plant stems, pods and leaves capable of transmitting the rust spores,
ASA is concerned that soybean imports from countries where rust has been
detected represent a risk to the U.S. soybean industry.
"ASA is working closely with USDA’s Animal and
Plant Health Inspection Service to develop protocols that will prevent
the accidental introduction of soybean rust from any potential imports
of soybeans or soybean meal," Heck said. "ASA and APHIS share
the goal of developing procedures that will protect the United States
while ensuring that the procedures are science-based and no more trade
restrictive than necessary to achieve the protection goal."
ASA is adamant that the risk assessment procedures
must be based on good science because the U.S. exports more than 1
billion bushels of soybeans each year and U.S. growers would not want
other countries to erect non-scientific barriers to trade.
"ASA is confident that USDA is working to
develop the right protocols to prevent the accidental introduction of
rust," Heck said. "As global exporters, it is in our best
interest to have plant protection measures around the globe that are
grounded in science because we also have to live with such measures to
reach our international customers."
During the past three years, ASA has worked
extensively with USDA’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service
(APHIS), Agricultural Research Service, the Office of Pest Management
Policy, and with the new Homeland Security Department on the rust issue.
ASA is also working with the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to
ensure fungicides are approved and readily available, promoting
additional federal funding to expand rust research, and now, hosting the
Soybean Rust Conference.
"What is needed now are more Federal dollars to
expand rust research," Heck said. "ASA is calling on the
Administration and Congress to substantially increase soybean rust
research funding. Growers can help by becoming ASA members, and by
calling on their Senators and Representatives to provide greater Federal
research funding to fight soybean rust disease."
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For more information contact:
Ron Heck, ASA President, 515/275-2853, checkers@netins.net
Bob Callanan, ASA Communications Director, 314/576-1770,
bcallanan@soy.org
Access this release at www.soygrowers.com
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