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EuroBlight Workshop 15-17 May 2017– Aarhus, Denmark

Current situation and future of CIP’s role in regional potato late blight networks

Jorge Andrade-Piedra Greg Forbes

Outline

• CIP’s mandate and structure • Some history: GILB, Euroblight (Arras) and

Bellagio meetings • Current activities: Asia, Africa, South America • Looking forward – Partnerships with private

companies: fungicides, host resistance, LB management

Nairobi, Kenya

Dhaka, Bangladesh

Kabale, Uganda

Addis Abba, Ethiopia Quito, Ecuador

Los Banos, The Philippines

New Delhi, India

Shillong, India

Bhubaneswar, India

Beijing, China

Ha Noi, Viet Nam

Wamena, Papua New Guinea

Lilongwe, Malawi

Chimoio, Mozambique

La Paz, Bolivia

Tblisi, Georgia

Cali, Colombia

Huancayo, Perú

San Ramón, Perú

Kumasi, Ghana

Ibadan, Nigeria

Ruhengeri, Rwanda

Blantyre, Malawi

Kathmandu, Nepal

Lambang, Indonesia

Lima, Peru

CIPs Strategy and Corporate plan 2014-2023: six programs

Development oriented: impact in the next 5-10 years

Game Changing Solutions

Research oriented: impact in the long term: 20-30 years Resilient

Nutritious Sweetpotato

Agile Potato for Asia

Potato Seed for Africa

Resilient Food Systems

Conserving Diversity for the Future

3 International meetings: Ecuador 1999, Hamburg 2002, China 2008 8 regional meetings: PE, NL, IL, US, BO, KR, CN, MM 480 members from 72 countries

Bellagio 2009, Arras 2010 From GILB to Global EuroBlight

Use of Euroblight model in the developing world • Pathogen monitoring

– Not much for DSS adjustment, but for explaining and anticipating durability of resistance, fungicide use, etc.

• Data management – Protocol standardization – Data bases

• Social capital and collaboration

Priority countries

Bangladesh China* Georgia India Indonesia Japan Korea* Nepal Taiwan Tajikistan Uzbekistan Vietnam Armenia Bhutan Kazakhstan Kyrgyzstan Malaysia Myanmar Pakistan Thailand Philippines

Initial AsiaBlight project: a coarse-scale map of the current late blight population in Asia

Blue: sent/received Green: not sent

Sampled for AsiaBlight * Sampled and genotyped by other projects Not sampled for AsiaBlight Louise Cooke

Tizon Latino (LatinBlight)

https://tizonlatino.wordpress.com/author/tizonlatino/

Panama 2016

Ivette Acuña

KE-1 = 2_A1

Red KE-1 (Potato) Blue US-1 (Potato) Cyan US-1 (Tomato)

Displacement of US-1 by KE-1 in Africa

• Mid 2014: no KE-1 in sw-UG

• End 2014: KE-1 in sw-UG

• 2015-2016: KE-1 in BI, RW, TZ

Anne Njoroge

Genetically modified potato in Uganda

2016. 4. 19

2016. 4. 19

RB and Rpi-blb2 from Solanum bulbocastanum

Rpi-vnt1.1 from S. venturii

Marc Ghislain Anne Njoroge

Host

Weather conditions

Time since last spray

Recommendation

Decision support system for smallholders

Willmer Pérez Peter Kromann

Factors

Cultivar susceptibility a and timing of field scouting

Level 1 (green) Level 2 (yellow) Level 3 (red)

Scouting: every 11 days Every 9 days Every 7 days

Weather

conditions (rainy

days since last

fungicide

application)

Level 1 (0 days)

Value = 0

Level 1 (0 days)

Value = 0

Level 1 (0 days)

Value = 0

Level 2 (1 or 2 days)

Value = 1

Level 2 (1 or 2 days)

Value = 1

Level 2 (1 or 2 days)

Value = 2

Level 3 (≥ 3 days)

Value = 2

Level 3 (≥ 3 days)

Value = 3

Level 3 (≥ 3days)

Value = 5

Time (days) since

last fungicide

application

Level 1 (< 11 days)

Value = 1

Level 1 (< 8 days)

Value = 1

Level 1 (< 6 days)

Value = 1

Level 2 (11 to 13 days)

Value = 3

Level 2 (9 to 12 days)

Value = 3

Level 2 (7 to 9 days)

Value = 3

Level 3 (≥ 13 days)

Value = 5

Level 3 (≥ 12 days)

Value = 5

Level 3 (≥ 10 days)

Value = 5

Decision support system for smallholders

Decision support system for smallholders

In summary

CIP’s role in LB R&D: • Pathogen studies • Breeding populations and resistant varieties • Decision support systems for farmers • Support to regional Blight networks So, what is next?

Asia, Africa, Latin Blight

• Alliances with private companies • Contacts at country level, but not at regional

level (except in Asia) • Potential areas of collaboration

– Pathogen studies – Fungicide testing – Dissemination of resistant cultivars – Validation of DSSs and training

Disease pyramid

Zadoks and Schein, 1979

Training

World Potato Congress, Cusco, Peru (co-organized by CIP and ALAP)

May 2018

The International Potato Center (known by its Spanish acronym CIP) is a research-for-

development organization with a focus on potato, sweetpotato, and Andean roots and tubers. CIP is

dedicated to delivering sustainable science-based solutions to the pressing world issues of hunger,

poverty, gender equity, climate change and the preservation of our Earth’s fragile biodiversity and

natural resources.

www.cipotato.org

CIP is a member of CGIAR

CGIAR is a global agriculture research partnership for a food secure future. Its science is carried

out by the 15 research centers who are members of the CGIAR Consortium in collaboration with

hundreds of partner organizations.

www.cgiar.org

Thank you! Jorge Andrade-Piedra j.andrade@cgiar.org