The Advance of Fusarium Wilt Tropical Race 4 in Musaceae of Latin America and the Caribbean: Current Situation
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methodology
2.1. Type of Research and Method of Analysis
2.2. Topic Analysis
2.2.1. The Threat of Foc TR4 in Banana Production
2.2.2. Bibliometric Analysis of the Scientific Production on Foc TR4 in LA
2.2.3. Current Situation of Foc TR4 in Colombia, Peru, and Venezuela
2.2.4. Medium-Term Prospects in LAC Member Countries
2.2.5. Export Trade and Local Food Security
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. The Threat of Foc TR4 in Banana Production
3.2. A Bibliometric Analysis of the Scientific Production of Foc TR4 in LAC
3.3. The Current Situation of Foc TR4 in Colombia, Peru, and Venezuela
3.3.1. Current Situation in Colombia
3.3.2. Program for Prevention and Containment of Foc TR4 in Colombia
- (a)
- Program supervision: A Unified Command Post (UCP) was created by instruction of the President of the Republic and the Minister of Agriculture. The national agriculture authorities, banana farmers’ associations, the military, and police forces formed the command to coordinate the interinstitutional actions for the containment of Foc TR4 in La Guajira, Colombia (Figure 5).
- (b)
- Articulation and coordination with stakeholders: The program involved the action of the Colombian Farmers’ Association (SAC), banana local farmers’ associations, and other actors in the supply production and commercial and logistics chains.
- (c)
- Empowerment and mandate: The NPPO was empowered to lead the response, take quarantine measures to contain the outbreak, be accountable for the program execution, and act as the technical secretariat of the UCP.
- (d)
- Take advantage of national capacities: The capabilities of the NPPO were used, using the national research institution of Colombia (AGROSAVIA), Bioversity International and the International Center for Tropical Agriculture (CIAT), Cenibanano, academic institutions, and other institutions dedicated to agricultural technology transfer. These institutions proposed sustainable alternatives based on scientific evidence and appropriate risk communication to respond to the Foc TR4 presence.
- (e)
- Cooperation and technical assistance: recognized organizations and world experts in Foc TR4 provided sustained support, cooperation, and technical assistance.
3.3.3. Current Situation in Peru
3.3.4. Program for Prevention and Containment of Foc TR4 in Peru
3.3.5. Current Situation in Venezuela
3.4. Medium-Term Prospects in LAC Member Countries
- (a)
- Ecuador: It is considered the main banana exporting country worldwide and is among the two countries that have reported the disease. The Phytosanitary and Zoosanitary Regulation and Control Agency—AGROCALIDAD in quality, NPPO of Ecuador, in Resolution No. 122 of the year 2017, designated Foc TR4 as a quarantine pest for the country [61].
- (b)
- Venezuela: The recent detection of Foc TR4 in the central and central-western region of Venezuela as well as to the proximity of the first source of infection in the Colombian Guajira to the border of both countries, where there are conditions of high fragility due to the flow of people, the commercial exchange added to the possible overflow of rivers in adjacent areas due to the of rainfall caused by tropical depressions, increasing the level of dispersion risk [10].
- (a)
- Campaigns on the radio, television, and social networks about the impact that the plague could have, both for the productive sector as well as for the population in general. They try to create a process of awareness of the population, in general, about the risk that the illegal introduction of plants, leaves, “seeds”, or souvenirs of vegetable fibers entails to the country in reference.
- (b)
- Placement of technical signage on symptoms and biosafety measures in communal and strategic areas.
- (c)
- Educate, inform, and support the implementation of relevant biosecurity measures.
- (d)
- The capacities of the official Pest Diagnosis Laboratory were strengthened (in terms of human resources, equipment, and methodology).
- (e)
- The inspection of imported in vitro plants that have entered each country in recent years, verifying that they were free of the pest.
- (f)
- Research on possible resistant varieties, although there is not yet a commercially viable option.
- (g)
- At the airport level, baggage checks and merchandise entry control are reinforced. The purchase of more X-ray equipment for entry points is under management. Special mats are placed with products that deactivate the possible presence of the fungus in the shoes or luggage wheels of people who enter the country through any of the entry points or borders. They are also improving and monitoring the conditions for international waste management (airline waste).
- (h)
- Some countries (the largest producers and exporters of bananas) are improving the infrastructure of the fumigation arches at the border and are updating the type of disinfectant used.
- (a)
- Consider that all Musaceae production sites must implement biosecurity measures in a time not exceeding one year.
- (b)
- Strengthen the surveillance system in all Musaceae production sites, with emphasis on actions to reinforce phytosanitary inspections in ports, airports, and border crossings.
- (c)
- Give continuity to the training for producers and other actors in the agricultural production chain so that they know how to implement biosecurity measures on their farms and that they can recognize the early symptoms caused by the pathogen and how to proceed in the event of a possible case of the disease.
- (d)
- Strengthen the diagnostic capacity for Foc TR4 and other Musaceae pests.
- (e)
- Promote the creation and management of germplasm banks that serve as support for the development of breeding programs and that contribute to the diversity of clones in planting systems and the evaluation of new resistant or tolerant materials.
3.5. Impacts of Foc TR4 on World Trade and Local Food Security in LAC
3.5.1. Impact of Foc TR4 in Countries with the Disease
3.5.2. Potential Short-Term Impact on World Markets
3.5.3. Potential Medium-Term Impact in Peru and Colombia
4. Summary Points and Future Issues
- (a)
- The containment measures for Foc TR4 worked until the moment they were defeated by the indiscriminate transit of contaminated material (vegetable soil, water, among others), to which must be added the great expansion of the area planted with Cavendish clones in monoculture systems, highly vulnerable to this pathogen. Its recent foray into LAC presupposes an impact on world banana production and trade.
- (b)
- The Foc TR4 prevention and containment programs that are currently available must be complied with, but at the same time, it is necessary, as previously mentioned, to advance the knowledge of the multiple factors related to this situation since, in this way, it will be possible to design management strategies for this disease based on scientific knowledge.
- (c)
- In Colombia, rapid intervention based on the eradication of areas adjacent to affected lots has been a successful measure. In Peru, the eradication measures have been applied in a localized way to try not to affect the total production of the producers since their production units are very small and represent their main economic support. In Venezuela, the recent emergency declaration of Foc TR4 puts local banana production at risk. In these cases, the design of an efficient biosecurity model for the production units, access to resistant plant material, soil health, early detection, and phytosanitary education at different levels about this disease are essential to contain it.
- (d)
- The range of impact of the disease is large and proportional to the disease’s contention and the producer’s financial capacity to face simultaneous yield losses and increased production costs. In the case of Peru and Colombia, the further spread of Foc TR4 could lead to production losses of organic bananas for export. The current situation in the American continent is even more complicated given the recent declaration (19 January 2023) of the presence of Foc TR4 in Venezuela. If the disease was to spread further to other regions, conventional bananas destined for both export and domestic markets could be at stake, leading to significant food safety concerns.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Ranking | Country | Exported Tons in 2021 |
---|---|---|
1 | Ecuador | 6,915,429 |
2 | Costa Rica | 2,507,485 |
3 | Philippines | 2,428,887 |
4 | Guatemala | 2,290,266 |
5 | Colombia | 1,993,597 |
6 | Panama | 700,000 |
7 | Mexico | 530,481 |
8 | Côte d’Ivoire | 380,000 |
9 | Dominican Republic | 360,192 |
10 | Honduras | 335,968 |
LAC Country | Estimated Area of Organic Banana (ha) | Share of World Surfaces (%) |
---|---|---|
Dominican Republic | 20,000 | 34.2 |
Ecuador | 18,830 | 32.2 |
Peru | 10,217 | 17.4 |
Mexico | 4184 | 7.1 |
Colombia | 4000 | 6.8 |
Other countries (not LAC) | 1300 | 2.2 |
World total | 58,531 | 100.0 |
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Martínez, G.; Olivares, B.O.; Rey, J.C.; Rojas, J.; Cardenas, J.; Muentes, C.; Dawson, C. The Advance of Fusarium Wilt Tropical Race 4 in Musaceae of Latin America and the Caribbean: Current Situation. Pathogens 2023, 12, 277. https://doi.org/10.3390/pathogens12020277
Martínez G, Olivares BO, Rey JC, Rojas J, Cardenas J, Muentes C, Dawson C. The Advance of Fusarium Wilt Tropical Race 4 in Musaceae of Latin America and the Caribbean: Current Situation. Pathogens. 2023; 12(2):277. https://doi.org/10.3390/pathogens12020277
Chicago/Turabian StyleMartínez, Gustavo, Barlin O. Olivares, Juan Carlos Rey, Juan Rojas, Jaime Cardenas, Carlos Muentes, and Carolina Dawson. 2023. "The Advance of Fusarium Wilt Tropical Race 4 in Musaceae of Latin America and the Caribbean: Current Situation" Pathogens 12, no. 2: 277. https://doi.org/10.3390/pathogens12020277
APA StyleMartínez, G., Olivares, B. O., Rey, J. C., Rojas, J., Cardenas, J., Muentes, C., & Dawson, C. (2023). The Advance of Fusarium Wilt Tropical Race 4 in Musaceae of Latin America and the Caribbean: Current Situation. Pathogens, 12(2), 277. https://doi.org/10.3390/pathogens12020277