PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

When theoretical and practical collide: researchers introduce new optimal recommendations for fungicide resistance management

When theoretical and practical collide: researchers introduce new optimal recommendations for fungicide resistance management
2023-03-24
(Press-News.org) Fungicide application, while helpful in controlling plant diseases, has complicated limitations that may cost growers both peace of mind and quantity of yield. Plant pathogens which would otherwise be killed off by fungicides can evolve to avenge their dead siblings, developing resistance that renders the standard dose of fungicide application ineffective. To delay fungicide resistance, growers commonly use mixtures of fungicides to treat yield-limiting fungal diseases—based on extensive research outlining how to construct these mixtures. However, this research does not completely translate to the common, real-world scenario where one fungicide has been available longer than the other, begging the question: what is the optimal strategy for application of fungicide mixtures when the initial levels of resistance to each fungicide differ?

To address this question, Nick Taylor and Nik Cunniffe from the University of Cambridge in the United Kingdom constructed a simple, alternative strategy by analyzing a mathematical model that incorporates pathogen sexual reproduction, which rarely is included in modelling studies despite its relevance to the evolutionary dynamics of fungal pathogens. Their paper, recently published in Phytopathology, applies the model to an economically important disease, Septoria leaf blotch on wheat, and provides an extensive analysis of its evolutionary dynamics.

Taylor and Cunniffe use the theoretical and mathematical model to find the optimal disease management strategy when initial resistance frequencies to the two fungicides in the mixture differ. The model demonstrates that previous modelling recommendations for fungicide resistance management are suboptimal and may fail in varying real-world circumstances. In contrast, their novel strategy is optimal even when initial resistance frequencies differ and when fungicide parameters and the proportion of between-season pathogen sexual reproduction varies. Additionally, they find that between-season pathogen sexual reproduction can affect the rate of resistance development but does not qualitatively affect the optimal strategy recommendation.

While this may seem complicated, Taylor comments, “The most exciting aspect of this research is the idea that such a complex problem can have a very simple solution. Although managing pathogen resistance to mixtures containing pairs of fungicides to which pathogens can potentially acquire resistance is difficult and complex, the optimal management strategy reliably works and is simple to state: the fungicide application program should be designed so that resistance to both fungicides is balanced by the end of the program.”

Ultimately, their strategy aims to balance disease control with resistance management by balancing resistance to both fungicides until resistance has increased so much that the program fails.

This strategy recommendation is robust to variations in parameters controlling pathogen epidemiology and fungicide efficacy, and once this strategy is verified experimentally in the future, it could potentially influence policy recommendations surrounding effective agricultural disease management. Cunniffe looks forward to “extending these ideas to allow for more complex models including fungicide resistance, as well as for resistance management strategies that vary over time.”

For additional details, read Optimal Resistance Management for Mixtures of High-Risk Fungicides: Robustness to the Initial Frequency of Resistance and Pathogen Sexual Reproduction published in Vol. 113, No. 1 January 2023 of Phytopathology.
 

Follow the authors on social media

Nick Taylor: LinkedIn

Nik Cunniffe: Twitter @nikcunniffe, LinkedIn

 

Follow us on Twitter @PhytopathologyJ and visit https://apsjournals.apsnet.org/journal/phyto to learn more.

END

[Attachments] See images for this press release:
When theoretical and practical collide: researchers introduce new optimal recommendations for fungicide resistance management When theoretical and practical collide: researchers introduce new optimal recommendations for fungicide resistance management 2

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Time of day matters when it comes to cancer diagnosis and treatment

2023-03-24
Your circadian rhythm doesn’t just govern your sleeping schedule; it can also impact cancer development, diagnosis, and treatment. In a review paper publishing in the journal Trends in Cell Biology on March 24, researchers discuss the role of circadian rhythms in tumor progression and spread and describe how we could better time when patients are tested for cancer and when they receive therapies to improve diagnostic accuracy and improve treatment success. “The circadian rhythm governs most of the cellular functions implicated in cancer progression, ...

RNA vaccination in rabbit mothers confers benefits to offspring in the womb

2023-03-24
Newly developed mRNA vaccines against Zika virus and HIV-1 produced strong antibody responses that transferred from pregnant rabbits to their offspring, researchers report March 24th in the journal Molecular Therapy. As noted by the authors, the results support further development of their vaccine platform, LIONTM/repRNA, for maternal and neonatal settings to protect against mother-to-child transmission of pathogens in animals and humans. The recent success of mRNA vaccines in response to the COVID-19 pandemic is a catalyst for the development of mRNA vaccines targeting other infectious diseases. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has authorized mRNA vaccines for children ...

State incentive program improves initiation of medication treatment for opioid use disorder after emergency visit

State incentive program improves initiation of medication treatment for opioid use disorder after emergency visit
2023-03-24
A novel statewide incentive program intended to improve “warm hand-offs” from Pennsylvania emergency departments to opioid use disorder treatment programs is associated with a 50% improvement in the initiation of medication-assisted treatment in Medicaid-enrolled patients, according to new research from University of Pittsburgh, Howard University, Johns Hopkins University, University of Pennsylvania and Vital Strategies scientists. The finding, published today in JAMA Health Forum, points to a potential policy ...

Marriage, children, sex-based differences in physician hours and income

2023-03-24
About The Study: Marriage and children were associated with a greater earnings penalty for female physicians, primarily due to fewer hours worked relative to men, in this study of 95,000 U.S. physicians. Addressing the barriers that lead to women working fewer hours could contribute to a reduction in the male-female earnings gap while helping to expand the effective physician workforce.  Authors: Lucy Skinner, M.P.H., of the Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth in Hanover, New Hampshire, is the corresponding author. To access the embargoed study: Visit ...

Food insecurity and cognitive trajectories in older adults

2023-03-24
About The Study: In this study using data from 3,037 community-dwelling Medicare beneficiaries, food insecurity was prevalent and associated with a decline in executive function. Interventions and policies aiming to increase healthy food access or reduce food insecurity should be assessed for their impact on older adults’ cognitive outcome.  Authors: Boeun Kim, Ph.D., M.P.H., R.N., of Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, is the corresponding author.  To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/  (doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2023.4674) Editor’s ...

More predictable renewable energy could lower costs

2023-03-24
Lower electricity costs for consumers and more reliable clean energy could be some of the benefits of a new study by the University of Adelaide researchers who have examined how predictable solar or wind energy generation is and the impact of it on profits in the electricity market. PhD candidate Sahand Karimi-Arpanahi and Dr Ali Pourmousavi Kani, Senior Lecturer from the University’s School of Electrical and Mechanical Engineering, have looked at different ways of achieving more predictable renewable energy with the ...

Synergistic iron carbide catalysts enable direct conversion of syngas into higher alcohols

2023-03-24
Higher alcohols (C2+ alcohols), which are important raw materials, have been used as the intermediates of valued products. They are also widely applied in various fields of fuel, food, fine chemicals, pharmaceuticals and energy. With the gradual depletion of petroleum resources, the direct synthesis of higher alcohols from syngas has become a sustainable and potential process because of its wide source of raw materials and high atomic utilization. However, the low yield of higher alcohols restricted industrial application. Recently, a research team led by Prof. SUN Jian and Prof. GE Qingjie from the Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics (DICP) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) has ...

The “wishbone” charm that restores the hope for bone regeneration

The “wishbone” charm that restores the hope for bone regeneration
2023-03-24
Researchers from Tokyo Medical and Dental University (TMDU) demonstrate how a polymeric nanoparticle gene delivery system can promote bone formation Tokyo, Japan - Does a “magic bullet” exist in regenerative medicine? Researchers have long wished to design a cutting-edge gene therapy that regenerates tissues damaged by disease or trauma. That wish may come true now that a research team has developed a polymeric gene delivery therapy that promotes new bone formation after traumatic inflammation. In a study published this month in the International Journal of Molecular Sciences, researchers from ...

Get help with integrated weed management

2023-03-24
Pesticide use must be reduced. The EU has set a target to reduce pesticide use by 50% by 2030. Therefore, a strong focus on integrated weed management must be maintained in the coming years. When it comes to weeds, the focus has mainly been on improving the efficacy of pesticides, replacing or complementing them with mechanical treatments in the field.  In the last five years, the Horizon 2020 project IWMPraise – Integrated Weed Management: PRActical Implementation and Solutions for Europe has conducted a large number of trials on ...

Photosynthesis: varying roads lead to the reaction center

2023-03-24
LMU chemists use high-precision quantum chemistry to study key elements of super-efficient energy transfer in an important element of photosynthesis. Photosynthesis is the motor of all life on Earth. Complex processes are required for the sunlight-powered conversion of carbon dioxide and water to energy-rich sugar and oxygen. These processes are driven by two protein complexes, photosystems I and II. In photosystem I, sunlight is used with an efficiency of almost 100%. Here a complex network of 288 chlorophylls plays the decisive role. A team led by LMU chemist Regina de Vivie-Riedle has ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Gene essential for vitamin D absorption could help unlock treatments for cancer and autoimmune diseases

Don’t feed the animals: Researchers warn of risks tied to wildlife interactions

New layered compound promotes two-dimensional magnetism researches and room-temperature magnetic applications

From passive to intelligent: Bioengineered organs meet electronics

Cassava witches’ broom disease takes flight in South America

Recycled tyre tech boosts railway resilience and cuts waste

From kelp to whales: marine heatwaves are reshaping ocean life

Short-term digital mental health interventions reduces depression and anxiety in Ukrainian children and adolescents displaced by war

Guselkumab demonstrates superior efficacy in landmark clinical trials and offers new hope to Crohn’s disease patients

Here’s how the U.S. military can trim its massive carbon footprint

What is chronic venous insufficiency?

Gene editing offers transformative solution to saving endangered species

Scar tissue in athletes’ hearts tied to higher risk of dangerous cardiac rhythms

Cracking the code of force-driven chemistry

What ever-growing incisors can teach us about genetic disease

UCalgary led research helps kids with acute gastroenteritis recover at home

“Sisters together’: Antiracist activism and the fight for trans inclusion at the Michigan Womyn’s Music Festival

A new pathway helps clean up toxic chemicals from plant cells

WPI researchers develop cleaner, scalable process to recycle lithium-ion batteries

NASA to launch SNIFS, Sun’s next trailblazing spectator

Programmable DNA moiré superlattices: expanding the material design space at the nanoscale

Polymer coating extends half life of MXene-based air quality sensor by 200% and enables regeneration

UTIA’s Robert Burns receives Gold Medal Honor from ASABE

Weight loss drugs like Ozempic may help prevent stroke and reduce brain injury-related complications, studies show

Magellanic penguins may use currents to conserve energy on long journeys

Novel dome-celled aerogels maintain superelasticity despite temperature extremes

Controlled human gut colonization by an engineered microbial therapeutic

Vaccination could mitigate climate-driven disruptions to malaria control

Smartphone-based earthquake detection and early warning system rivals traditional, seismic network based alternatives

First winner of AAAS-Chen Institute Prize builds tool to visualize biomolecular interactions

[Press-News.org] When theoretical and practical collide: researchers introduce new optimal recommendations for fungicide resistance management