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Panama disease

Panama disease (or Fusarium wilt) is a plant disease that infects banana plants (Musa spp.). It is a wilting disease caused by the fungus Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. cubense (Foc). The pathogen is resistant to fungicides and its control is limited to phytosanitary measures.[1]

Panama disease
Gros Michel banana affected by disease, Costa Rica, 1919
Common namesPanama disease
Fusarium wilt of banana
Vascular wilt of banana
Causal agentsFusarium oxysporum f.sp. cubense
HostsBanana
VectorsWater, soil residues, replanting of suckers, farming tools and transport, leaf trash
EPPO CodeFUSACB
DistributionIndonesia, China, Malaysia, Australia, the Philippines, Jordan, Vietnam, Laos, Pakistan, Lebanon, Mozambique, Oman

During the 1950s, an outbreak of Panama disease almost wiped out commercial Gros Michel banana production. The Gros Michel banana was the dominant cultivar of bananas, and Fusarium wilt inflicted enormous costs and forced producers to switch to other, disease-resistant cultivars. Since the 2010s, a new outbreak of Panama disease caused by the strain Tropical Race 4 (TR4) has threatened the production of the Cavendish banana, today's most popular cultivar.

Overview edit

Although fruits of the wild bananas (Musa spp.) have large, hard seeds, most edible bananas are seedless. Banana plants are therefore propagated asexually from offshoots. Because these rhizomes are usually free of symptoms even when the plant is infected by F. oxysporum f. sp. cubense, they are a common means by which this pathogen is disseminated. It can also be spread in soil and running water, on farm implements or machinery.[2]

Panama disease is one of the most destructive plant diseases of modern times.[2][3] It is believed to have originated in Southeast Asia[4] and was first reported in Australia in 1876.[5] The disease didn't attract widespread attention until the early 20th century when it began heavily affecting banana cultivations in Panama and Costa Rica.[6] By 1950 it had spread to all the banana-producing regions of the world with the exception of some islands in the South Pacific, the Mediterranean, Melanesia and Somalia.[5]

 
Gros Michel

Panama disease affects a wide range of banana cultivars; however, it is best known for the damage it caused to a single cultivar in the early export plantations.[2] Before 1960, a total reliance was put on the cultivar 'Gros Michel', and it supplied almost all the export trade. It proved susceptible to the disease[4] and the use of infected rhizomes to establish new plantations caused widespread and severe losses. Some indication of the scale of the losses is demonstrated by the complete eradication of production on 30,000 hectares (74,000 acres) of plantation in the Ulua Valley of Honduras between 1940 and 1960. In Suriname, an entire operation of 4,000 hectares (9,900 acres) was out of business within eight years and in the Quepos area of Costa Rica, 6,000 hectares (15,000 acres) were destroyed in twelve years.[5] Overall fungal diseases - including most prominently Foc - are disproportionately important to small island developing states.[7]

 
Cavendish

By the middle of the 20th century, resistant cultivars in the 'Cavendish' subgroup were being used as a substitute for 'Gros Michel' in the export trade.[8][4] For a time these cultivars did prove resilient and grew well, and in some areas remain the clones on which the current export trade is based. Unfortunately, in several growing areas in the Eastern Hemisphere, these cultivars are falling to TR4.[4] The disease was also detected in Colombia in 2019.[9] This poses a significant threat to production, because there are currently no acceptable replacement cultivars.[5] It is anticipated by experts that disease surveillance, integrated pest management, breeding of resistant cultivars, and genetic engineering will yield worthwhile results.[10] This conclusion comes from an economic analysis which examined these as investments which governments and international organizations may or may not choose to invest in.[10] Their opinion was that there would be positive yield from these investments, taken as either net present value or the internal rate of return.[10]

A variant cultivar called Formosana (GCTCV-218), a type of Taiwanese Cavendish, has been reported in the popular press as having some resistance to TR4,[11] as well as by Molina et al 2009,[12] although in 2015 Ploetz was of the opinion that it has been evaluated as having no resistance at all.[13] 'GCTCV-119' is another Taiwanese Cavendish used commercially for its TR4 resistance.[12]

To make things worse, this variant of the pathogen also affects plantains (Musa acuminata × balbisiana) which are an important staple food in tropical regions of the world.[5] The average American eats 26.2 pounds (11.9 kg) of the Cavendish banana each year, and the question is being asked as to whether this oft-consumed fruit is on course to extinction.[14]

Apart from the export trade, 85% of banana production is for local consumption and many of the cultivars used for this purpose are also susceptible to infection.[5]

Distribution edit

Not all banana-producing countries have been affected by the outbreak of Panama disease. Tropical Race 4 (TR4) was first identified in Taiwan,[15] and from there rapidly spread to Indonesia, China, Malaysia, Australia and the Philippines.[16] The disease was then identified in Jordan in 2013.[17] TR4 later spread to Vietnam[18] and Laos,[19] as well as to the Middle East being reported in Pakistan and Lebanon.[20] In 2015, the disease then spread to Africa, being informally announced in Mozambique and Oman.[16] In August 2019, TR4 arrived in Colombia, a country in Latin America, the region comprising the world's biggest banana exporters.[21]

Symptoms edit

 
The fungus climbing up through the tree stem
 

Infection by F. oxysporum f. sp. cubense triggers the self-defense mechanisms of the host plant causing the secretion of a gel. This is followed by the formation of tylose in the vascular vessels which blocks the movement of water and nutrients to the upper parts of the plant.[citation needed] The tips of the feeder roots are the initial sites of infection which then moves on to the rhizome. The signs of the disease are most noticeable as a dark stain where the stele joins the cortex. As the disease develops, large portions of the xylem turn a reddish-brown colour. Externally, the oldest leaves start turning yellow and there is often a longitudinal splitting of the lower part of the outer leaf sheaths on the pseudostem. The leaves begin to wilt and may buckle at the base of the petiole. As the disease progresses, younger leaves are affected, turn yellow and crumple and the whole canopy begins to consist of dead or dying leaves.[5] The leaf symptoms of Fusarium wilt can be confused with those of Xanthomonas wilt. In plants affected by Fusarium, yellowing and wilting of the leaves typically progresses from the older to the younger leaves.[22] The wilted leaves may also snap at the petiole and hang down the pseudostem. In plants affected by Xanthomonas, the wilting can begin with any leaf and the infected leaves tend to snap along the leaf blade.

Two external symptoms help characterize Panama disease of banana:

  • Yellow leaf syndrome, the yellowing of the border of the leaves which eventually leads to bending of the petiole.[1]
  • Green leaf syndrome, which occurs in certain cultivars, marked by the persistence of the green color of the leaves followed by the bending of the petiole as in yellow leaf syndrome. Internally, the disease is characterized by a vascular discoloration. This begins in the roots and rhizomes with a yellowing that proceeds to a reddish-brown color in the pseudostem, as the pathogen blocks the plant's nutrient and water transport.[1][23]
  • With proceeding infection, the banana pseudostem can split, and eventually the whole plant collapses.[1]

External symptoms often get confused with the symptoms of bacterial wilt of banana, but ways to differentiate between the two diseases include:

  • Fusarium wilt proceeds from older to younger leaves, but bacterial wilt is the opposite.
  • Fusarium wilt has no symptoms on the growing buds or suckers, no exudates visible within the plant, and no symptoms in the fruit. Bacterial wilt can be characterized by distorted or necrotic buds, bacterial ooze within the plant, and fruit rot and necrosis.[23]

Once a banana plant is infected, recovery is rare, but if it does occur, any new emerging suckers will already be infected and can propagate disease if planted.[23]

Classification and host range edit

 
Foc causes the disease

Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. cubense (Foc) is a member of the Fusarium oxysporum species complex, a group of ascomycete fungi with morphological similarities.[24][25] Based on their different host species, the plant pathogenic fungi of this species complex are divided into approximately 150 special forms (formae specialis, f.sp.).[26] Fusarium oxysprorum f.sp. cubense mainly infects banana (Musa) species. The special form cubense has been subdivided into four different races, which each attack a different group of banana genotypes.

  • Race 1 was involved in the 1960s Panama disease outbreak which destroyed much of the Gros Michel banana plantations in Central America. In addition to Gros Michel, Race 1 also attacks other members of the banana AAB genomic group, including Abacá, Maqueño, the Silk subgroup, the Pome subgroup, Pisang Awak, Ducasse, and Lady Finger.[27] Cavendish cultivars are resistant to Race 1.
  • Race 2 infects cooking bananas with ABB genome and the Bluggoe subgroup.[24]
  • Race 3 infecting Heliconia spp. is no longer considered pathogenic to bananas,[1] and has been renamed Fusarium oxysporum f.sp. heliconiae.[24][28]
  • Race 4 is the causal agent of the current Panama disease outbreak since it is pathogenic to the currently used Cavendish cultivars (AAA genome). Race 4 is further subdivided into Tropical Race 4 (TR4) and Subtropical Race 4 (STR4). The latter only infects Cavendish and Race 1 and 2 susceptibles under abiotic stress.[29]

Tropical Race 1/TR1 edit

Tropical Race 1/TR1 is also found in Paspalum fasciculatum, Panicum purpurescens, Ixophorus unisetus, and Commelina diffusa in Central America.[30] These weeds may be acting as an inoculum source.[4] As of 13 November 2020 TR1 is found in Queensland.[31]

Tropical Race 2/TR2 edit

As of 13 November 2020 Tropical Race 2/TR2 is found in Queensland.[31]

Tropical Race 3/TR3 edit

Tropical Race 3/TR3 is a pest of Heliconia ornamental flowers.[32][28] Formerly reported to be a lesser pest of Musa balbisiana seedlings and of Gros Michel, but that is no longer thought to be true.[28][8] Now renamed Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. heliconiae.[33][28]

Tropical Race 4/TR4 edit

[34][35] Tropical Race 4/TR4 belongs to vegetative compatibility group 01213/16. All cultivars which are susceptible to Race 1 and Race2 are susceptible to TR4 (see § Race 1 and § Race 2).[12]

History of geographic spread edit

1997 edit

2005 edit

2010 edit

2015 edit

  • However, the test used (the Dita PCR)[39][40] was questioned after this detection was reported, and is no longer used by BQ.[37] A dissection of the tree trunk showed none of the usual symptoms of Fusarium infiltration.[37]
  • May 18: Another 18 samples (of unspecified individual(s) from the same farm) tested negative.[37]

2017 edit

2018 edit

2020 edit

2021 edit

  • In April the first detection in Peru occurred, in the Department of Piura, and on the 11th the National Service for Agricultural Health declared a phytosanitary emergency for the whole country. Ecuador had already been inspecting imports at the border due to Colombia's detection, and then increased inspections further in April.[42][43] The appearance of TR4 in Peru threatens its 170,000 hectares (420,000 acres) of plantations.[44]

Subtropical Race 4/STR4 edit

Subtropical Race 4/STR4 is a subtropical race and does not become symptomatic on Cavendish until the trees are stressed by cold.[36] As of 13 July 2018 quarantines for STR4 are imposed over South East Queensland, northern New South Wales, and Western Australia.[36] As of 13 November 2020 STR4 is found in South East Queensland.[31] Also found in Paspalum spp. and Amaranthus spp. in Australia.[34] These weeds may be acting as sources of inoculum.[4]

Disease cycle edit

Modern commercially farmed banana plants are reproduced asexually, by replanting the plant's basal shoot that grows after the original plant has been cut down. Being triploid, the fruit contains no seeds, and the male flower does not produce pollen suitable for pollination, prohibiting sexual reproduction. This causes all bananas of a single breed to be nearly genetically identical. The fungus easily spreads from plant to plant because the individual plants' defenses are nearly identical.[45]

The disease is dispersed by spores or infected material that travel in surface water or farming activities. One of the biggest issues in spreading the disease is the means by which new banana plants are planted. Suckers are taken from one plant and clonally propagated to grow new trees. About 30 to 40% of suckers from a diseased plant are infected and not all show symptoms, so the chance of growing a new, already infected plant is fairly high. Finally, the disease is known to infect certain weeds without showing symptoms, meaning it can survive in the absence of banana plants and remain undetected in a place where bananas are planted later.[46]

FOC is thought to persist only asexually, as no sexual phase (teleomorph) has been observed. Recombination events may occur via somatic hybridisation and the parasexual cycle.[47]

This means that the survival and dispersal of the disease relies on purely asexual spores and structures. The disease survives in chlamydospores which are released as the plant dies and can survive in the soil for up to 30 years. When the environment is ideal and there are host roots available (fungus is attracted to root exudates), these chlamydospores will germinate and hyphae will penetrate the roots, initiating infection. There is an increase in the number of symptomatic plants when inflorescences emerge and the highest disease incidence occurs right before harvest.[46] Once infected, microconidia are produced and proliferate within the vessels of the plant's vascular system. Macroconidia are another asexual spore that tends to be found on the surface of plants killed by Panama disease.[48] Infection is systemic, moving through the vascular system and causing yellowing and buckling that starts in older leaves and progresses to younger leaves until the entire plant dies.[46]

Dispersal edit

Splash by rainfall, movement of contaminated soil, and movement of contaminated propagation materials are the major means of dispersal of Foc. Dispersal by wind alone remains unproven and while animals can test positive for Foc on their outer surfaces, it remains unproven whether they can be effective vectors.[4]

History edit

Gros Michel devastation era edit

The Gros Michel was the only type of banana eaten in the United States from the late 19th century until after World War II. The disease was serious and diagnosed in Panama banana plantations of Central America. Over several decades, the fungus spread from Panama to neighboring countries, moving north through Costa Rica to Guatemala and south into Colombia and Ecuador.

The banana industry was in a serious crisis, so a new banana thought to be immune to Panama disease was found and adopted, the Cavendish. In a few years, the devastated plantations resumed business as usual, and the transition went smoothly in the American market. Shortly thereafter, Malaysia entered the banana-growing business. Cavendish banana plantations were new to that country in the 1980s, but they rapidly expanded to meet the demand. Thousands of acres of rain forests and former palm oil plantations were shifted to banana production. Within a few years, though, the new plants began to die. While it took several years to find, the cause was ultimately attributed back to Panama disease. Although the Cavendish was then thought to be immune, it was immune only to the strain of the fungus that destroyed the Gros Michel. The version that annihilated the Gros Michel was found only in the Western Hemisphere, but the version found in Malaysian soil was different, and the Cavendish is susceptible to it. It killed and spread faster, inspiring more panic than its earlier counterpart in Panama. The newly discovered strain of F. oxysporum was named tropical race 4 (TR4).

TR4 devastation era edit

Tropical Race 4 (TR4) was discovered in Taiwan in 1989.[49] In July 2013, members of OIRSA, a Latin American regional organisation for plant and animal health, produced a contingency plan specific to TR4 for its nine member countries (Belize, Costa Rica, Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua and Panama). The plan is only available in Spanish.[50] In March 2015, Latin America growers met to create a regional defense effort and planned to meet again in September or October of that year. No specific regional measures are in place. Ecuadorian growers requested the government to fumigate all containers.[51]

Scientists are trying to modify the banana plant to make it resist Panama disease and many other serious banana afflictions ranging from fungal, bacterial, and viral infections to nematodes and beetles. Researchers are combing remote jungles searching for new wild bananas. Hybrid bananas are being created in the hope of generating a new variety with strong resistance to diseases. Some[who?] believe the best hope for a more resilient banana is through genetic engineering. However, the resulting fruit also needs to taste good, ripen in a predictable amount of time, travel long distances undamaged, and be easy to grow in great quantities. Currently, no cultivar or hybrid meets all of these criteria.

Australian quarantine edit

In Queensland, a farm in Tully, 1,500 kilometres (900 mi) north of Brisbane, was quarantined and some plants were destroyed after TR4 was detected on March 3, 2015. After an initial shutdown of the infected farm, truckloads of fruit left in April with harvesting allowed to resume under strict biosecurity arrangements. The government says it is not feasible to eradicate the fungus. Researchers like Gert Kema, based at Wageningen University, The Netherlands, say the disease will continue to spread, despite efforts to contain it, as long as susceptible varieties are being grown.[52] The disease was again detected in Tully in July 2017, prompting Biosecurity Queensland to impose quarantine conditions.[53]

Outside experts were brought in to review Biosecurity Queensland's performance 15 February to 24 May 2021. Their assessment credits BQ with quick and effective response which is being emulated by other countries. Thus far TR4 continues to be contained to the Tully Valley only and containment is thought to be possible as long as accidental human movement and transport in flowing water can be halted.[54]

Spread to Colombia edit

In August 2019, authorities in Colombia declared a national emergency after confirming that Panama disease had reached Latin America. "Once you see it, it is too late, and it has likely already spread outside that zone without recognition," said one expert quoted by National Geographic.[21]

Disease management edit

As fungicides are largely ineffective, there are few options for managing Panama disease.[8] Chemical sterilisation of the soil with methyl bromide significantly reduced incidence of the disease but was found to be effective for only three years after which the pathogen had recolonised the fumigated areas.[55] Injecting the host plants with carbendazim and potassium phosphonate appears to provide some control but results have been inconclusive. Heat treatment of soil has also been tried in the Philippines but the pathogen is likely to reinvade the treated area.[5] The greatest hope for managing this disease in infested soils is the development of genetic modifications that will provide resistant cultivars.[56][57] Early research into Foc often was conducted by large companies with a financial interest in banana productivity, especially the United Fruit Company. Among UFC's notable pathologists was Frederick Wellman in the 1920s.[58]

Modified bananas developed in collaboration by Ugandan and Belgian scientists were reported in 2008 to be grown experimentally in Uganda.[59] In Australia the movement, sharing, and sale of propagation material is heavily restricted, especially between states, to slow down the combined threat of TR4, Bunchy Top, and leaf spot.[60] The RGA2 gene is (as of 2017) totally effective against TR4. It is unexpressed in Cavendish but has been found expressed in the diploid M. a. ssp. malaccensis. It may be possible to produce an expressing Cavendish with CRISPR.[41]

Several bacterially-derived volatile organic compounds have been found by Yuan et al 2012 to be selectively toxic to Foc: Various alkylated benzenes, various phenols, various naphthalenes, benzothiazole, 2-ethyl-1-hexanol, 2-undecanol, 2-nonanone, 2-decanone, 2-undecanone, nonanal, and decanal.[61] Currently, fungicides and other chemical and biological control agents have proven fairly unsuccessful, or only successful in vitro or in greenhouses, in the face of Panama disease of bananas. The most commonly used practices include mostly sanitation and quarantine practices to prevent the spread of Panama disease out of infected fields. However, the most effective tool against Panama disease is the development of banana plants resistant to Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. cubense.[23] The clonal reproduction of banana has led to a consequential lack of other varieties. Efforts are being made to produce resistant varieties, but with bananas being triploids which do not produce seeds, this is not an easy task. Creating clones from tissue cultures, rather than suckers, has proven somewhat successful in breeding resistant varieties, although these tend to have decreased success in stress-tolerance, yield, or other beneficial traits necessary for commercial varieties.[46] Nevertheless, these efforts are leading to the best control measure for Panama disease of banana.

In 2017 a disease-resistance gene (RGA2) was transformed into Cavendish bananas which showed disease resistance to Fusarium wilt tropical race 4. One specific transformed line, which consisted of eight plants, showed resistance in the field for all of them. The field trial lasted three years and the plants exhibited a yield drag.[62]

Taiwanese researchers believe that the onset of TR4 was linked to soil degradation caused by the use of chemical fertilizers.[63]

Hong et al 2020 achieved significant suppression with a chilli pepper/banana rotation. This success is not merely applicable to Musa or even crops in general - it suggests that a similar "rotation" concept in livestock is advisable.[64]

The resistance of different banana cultivars to the pathogen is under scrutiny.[65]

The FAO provides a sanitation and diagnostic manual.[23]

Banana breeding impeded by triploidy edit

One major impediment to breeding bananas is polyploidy; Gros Michel and Cavendish bananas are triploid and thus attempts at meiosis in the plant's ovules cannot produce a viable gamete. Only rarely does the first reduction division in meiosis in the plants' flowers tidily fail completely, resulting in a euploid triploid ovule, which can be fertilized by normal haploid pollen from a diploid banana variety; a whole stem of bananas would contain only a few seeds and sometimes none. As a result, the resulting new banana variety is tetraploid, and thus contains seeds; the market for bananas is not accustomed to bananas with seeds. Experience showed that where both meiosis steps failed, causing a heptaploid seedling, or when the seedling is aneuploid, results are not as good.[citation needed]

Second-generation breeding using those new tetraploids as both parents has tended not to yield good results, because the first generation contains the Gros Michel triploid gene set intact (plus possibly useful features in the added fourth chromosome set), but in the second generation, the Gros Michel gene set has been broken up by meiosis.

The Honduras Foundation for Agricultural Research cultivates several varieties of the Gros Michel. They have succeeded in producing a few seeds by hand-pollinating the flowers with pollen from diploid seeded bananas.[66]

See also edit

References edit

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Further reading edit

  • Koeppel, Dan (2019-03-18). "Can this fruit be saved?". Popular Science. Retrieved 2021-12-21. (discusses the disease threat to banana crops)
  • Lovett, Brian (2021-06-24). "Clone Wars: How Fusarium Fungi Control the Banana Industry". American Society for Microbiology. Retrieved 2021-12-21. (less technical explanation)

External links edit

  • "Fusarium wilt of banana" on ProMusa's Musapedia
  • Can This Fruit be Saved?
  • Fusarium Wilt - A global threat to the banana

panama, disease, fusarium, wilt, plant, disease, that, infects, banana, plants, musa, wilting, disease, caused, fungus, fusarium, oxysporum, cubense, pathogen, resistant, fungicides, control, limited, phytosanitary, measures, gros, michel, banana, affected, di. Panama disease or Fusarium wilt is a plant disease that infects banana plants Musa spp It is a wilting disease caused by the fungus Fusarium oxysporum f sp cubense Foc The pathogen is resistant to fungicides and its control is limited to phytosanitary measures 1 Panama diseaseGros Michel banana affected by disease Costa Rica 1919Common namesPanama diseaseFusarium wilt of bananaVascular wilt of bananaCausal agentsFusarium oxysporum f sp cubenseHostsBananaVectorsWater soil residues replanting of suckers farming tools and transport leaf trashEPPO CodeFUSACBDistributionIndonesia China Malaysia Australia the Philippines Jordan Vietnam Laos Pakistan Lebanon Mozambique Oman During the 1950s an outbreak of Panama disease almost wiped out commercial Gros Michel banana production The Gros Michel banana was the dominant cultivar of bananas and Fusarium wilt inflicted enormous costs and forced producers to switch to other disease resistant cultivars Since the 2010s a new outbreak of Panama disease caused by the strain Tropical Race 4 TR4 has threatened the production of the Cavendish banana today s most popular cultivar Contents 1 Overview 2 Distribution 3 Symptoms 4 Classification and host range 5 Tropical Race 1 TR1 6 Tropical Race 2 TR2 7 Tropical Race 3 TR3 8 Tropical Race 4 TR4 8 1 History of geographic spread 8 1 1 1997 8 1 2 2005 8 1 3 2010 8 1 4 2015 8 1 5 2017 8 1 6 2018 8 1 7 2020 8 1 8 2021 8 2 Subtropical Race 4 STR4 9 Disease cycle 9 1 Dispersal 10 History 10 1 Gros Michel devastation era 10 2 TR4 devastation era 10 3 Australian quarantine 10 4 Spread to Colombia 11 Disease management 11 1 Banana breeding impeded by triploidy 12 See also 13 References 14 Further reading 15 External linksOverview editAlthough fruits of the wild bananas Musa spp have large hard seeds most edible bananas are seedless Banana plants are therefore propagated asexually from offshoots Because these rhizomes are usually free of symptoms even when the plant is infected by F oxysporumf sp cubense they are a common means by which this pathogen is disseminated It can also be spread in soil and running water on farm implements or machinery 2 Panama disease is one of the most destructive plant diseases of modern times 2 3 It is believed to have originated in Southeast Asia 4 and was first reported in Australia in 1876 5 The disease didn t attract widespread attention until the early 20th century when it began heavily affecting banana cultivations in Panama and Costa Rica 6 By 1950 it had spread to all the banana producing regions of the world with the exception of some islands in the South Pacific the Mediterranean Melanesia and Somalia 5 nbsp Gros Michel Panama disease affects a wide range of banana cultivars however it is best known for the damage it caused to a single cultivar in the early export plantations 2 Before 1960 a total reliance was put on the cultivar Gros Michel and it supplied almost all the export trade It proved susceptible to the disease 4 and the use of infected rhizomes to establish new plantations caused widespread and severe losses Some indication of the scale of the losses is demonstrated by the complete eradication of production on 30 000 hectares 74 000 acres of plantation in the Ulua Valley of Honduras between 1940 and 1960 In Suriname an entire operation of 4 000 hectares 9 900 acres was out of business within eight years and in the Quepos area of Costa Rica 6 000 hectares 15 000 acres were destroyed in twelve years 5 Overall fungal diseases including most prominently Foc are disproportionately important to small island developing states 7 nbsp Cavendish By the middle of the 20th century resistant cultivars in the Cavendish subgroup were being used as a substitute for Gros Michel in the export trade 8 4 For a time these cultivars did prove resilient and grew well and in some areas remain the clones on which the current export trade is based Unfortunately in several growing areas in the Eastern Hemisphere these cultivars are falling to TR4 4 The disease was also detected in Colombia in 2019 9 This poses a significant threat to production because there are currently no acceptable replacement cultivars 5 It is anticipated by experts that disease surveillance integrated pest management breeding of resistant cultivars and genetic engineering will yield worthwhile results 10 This conclusion comes from an economic analysis which examined these as investments which governments and international organizations may or may not choose to invest in 10 Their opinion was that there would be positive yield from these investments taken as either net present value or the internal rate of return 10 A variant cultivar called Formosana GCTCV 218 a type of Taiwanese Cavendish has been reported in the popular press as having some resistance to TR4 11 as well as by Molina et al 2009 12 although in 2015 Ploetz was of the opinion that it has been evaluated as having no resistance at all 13 GCTCV 119 is another Taiwanese Cavendish used commercially for its TR4 resistance 12 To make things worse this variant of the pathogen also affects plantains Musa acuminata balbisiana which are an important staple food in tropical regions of the world 5 The average American eats 26 2 pounds 11 9 kg of the Cavendish banana each year and the question is being asked as to whether this oft consumed fruit is on course to extinction 14 Apart from the export trade 85 of banana production is for local consumption and many of the cultivars used for this purpose are also susceptible to infection 5 Distribution editNot all banana producing countries have been affected by the outbreak of Panama disease Tropical Race 4 TR4 was first identified in Taiwan 15 and from there rapidly spread to Indonesia China Malaysia Australia and the Philippines 16 The disease was then identified in Jordan in 2013 17 TR4 later spread to Vietnam 18 and Laos 19 as well as to the Middle East being reported in Pakistan and Lebanon 20 In 2015 the disease then spread to Africa being informally announced in Mozambique and Oman 16 In August 2019 TR4 arrived in Colombia a country in Latin America the region comprising the world s biggest banana exporters 21 Symptoms edit nbsp The fungus climbing up through the tree stem nbsp Infection by F oxysporumf sp cubense triggers the self defense mechanisms of the host plant causing the secretion of a gel This is followed by the formation of tylose in the vascular vessels which blocks the movement of water and nutrients to the upper parts of the plant citation needed The tips of the feeder roots are the initial sites of infection which then moves on to the rhizome The signs of the disease are most noticeable as a dark stain where the stele joins the cortex As the disease develops large portions of the xylem turn a reddish brown colour Externally the oldest leaves start turning yellow and there is often a longitudinal splitting of the lower part of the outer leaf sheaths on the pseudostem The leaves begin to wilt and may buckle at the base of the petiole As the disease progresses younger leaves are affected turn yellow and crumple and the whole canopy begins to consist of dead or dying leaves 5 The leaf symptoms of Fusarium wilt can be confused with those of Xanthomonas wilt In plants affected by Fusarium yellowing and wilting of the leaves typically progresses from the older to the younger leaves 22 The wilted leaves may also snap at the petiole and hang down the pseudostem In plants affected by Xanthomonas the wilting can begin with any leaf and the infected leaves tend to snap along the leaf blade Two external symptoms help characterize Panama disease of banana Yellow leaf syndrome the yellowing of the border of the leaves which eventually leads to bending of the petiole 1 Green leaf syndrome which occurs in certain cultivars marked by the persistence of the green color of the leaves followed by the bending of the petiole as in yellow leaf syndrome Internally the disease is characterized by a vascular discoloration This begins in the roots and rhizomes with a yellowing that proceeds to a reddish brown color in the pseudostem as the pathogen blocks the plant s nutrient and water transport 1 23 With proceeding infection the banana pseudostem can split and eventually the whole plant collapses 1 External symptoms often get confused with the symptoms of bacterial wilt of banana but ways to differentiate between the two diseases include Fusarium wilt proceeds from older to younger leaves but bacterial wilt is the opposite Fusarium wilt has no symptoms on the growing buds or suckers no exudates visible within the plant and no symptoms in the fruit Bacterial wilt can be characterized by distorted or necrotic buds bacterial ooze within the plant and fruit rot and necrosis 23 Once a banana plant is infected recovery is rare but if it does occur any new emerging suckers will already be infected and can propagate disease if planted 23 Classification and host range edit nbsp Foc causes the disease Fusarium oxysporum f sp cubense Foc is a member of the Fusarium oxysporum species complex a group of ascomycete fungi with morphological similarities 24 25 Based on their different host species the plant pathogenic fungi of this species complex are divided into approximately 150 special forms formae specialis f sp 26 Fusarium oxysprorum f sp cubense mainly infects banana Musa species The special form cubense has been subdivided into four different races which each attack a different group of banana genotypes Race 1 was involved in the 1960s Panama disease outbreak which destroyed much of the Gros Michel banana plantations in Central America In addition to Gros Michel Race 1 also attacks other members of the banana AAB genomic group including Abaca Maqueno the Silk subgroup the Pome subgroup Pisang Awak Ducasse and Lady Finger 27 Cavendish cultivars are resistant to Race 1 Race 2 infects cooking bananas with ABB genome and the Bluggoe subgroup 24 Race 3 infecting Heliconia spp is no longer considered pathogenic to bananas 1 and has been renamed Fusarium oxysporum f sp heliconiae 24 28 Race 4 is the causal agent of the current Panama disease outbreak since it is pathogenic to the currently used Cavendish cultivars AAA genome Race 4 is further subdivided into Tropical Race 4 TR4 and Subtropical Race 4 STR4 The latter only infects Cavendish and Race 1 and 2 susceptibles under abiotic stress 29 Tropical Race 1 TR1 editFor the causative organism and its biology see Fusarium oxysporum f sp cubense Tropical Race 1 Tropical Race 1 TR1 is also found in Paspalum fasciculatum Panicum purpurescens Ixophorus unisetus and Commelina diffusa in Central America 30 These weeds may be acting as an inoculum source 4 As of 13 November 2020 update TR1 is found in Queensland 31 Tropical Race 2 TR2 editFor the causative organism and its biology see Fusarium oxysporum f sp cubense Tropical Race 2 As of 13 November 2020 update Tropical Race 2 TR2 is found in Queensland 31 Tropical Race 3 TR3 editFor the causative organism and its biology see Fusarium oxysporum f sp cubense Tropical Race 3 Tropical Race 3 TR3 is a pest of Heliconia ornamental flowers 32 28 Formerly reported to be a lesser pest of Musa balbisiana seedlings and of Gros Michel but that is no longer thought to be true 28 8 Now renamed Fusarium oxysporum f sp heliconiae 33 28 Tropical Race 4 TR4 editFor the causative organism and its biology see Fusarium oxysporum f sp cubense Tropical Race 4 34 35 Tropical Race 4 TR4 belongs to vegetative compatibility group 01213 16 All cultivars which are susceptible to Race 1 and Race2 are susceptible to TR4 see Race 1 and Race 2 12 History of geographic spread edit 1997 edit The first detection in Australia occurs near Darwin Northern Territory 31 36 2005 edit Chloris inflata Euphorbia heterophylla Cyanthillium cinereum and Tridax procumbens in banana farms in Australia known to be infected with TR4 35 These weeds may be acting as sources of inoculum 4 2010 edit Starting here TR4 spread from its origin in southeast Asia westward into Vietnam Laos Myanmar India Pakistan Oman Jordan Lebanon Israel and Mozambique 4 2015 edit March 26 37 Sample taken from a suspect tree on a farm in Mareeba 37 Queensland Australia 38 March 28 TR4 was detected in those samples 37 The far north of Queensland producing 95 of the 580 million of bananas Australia turns out every year this was immediately taken seriously by Biosecurity Queensland s Panama TR4 Program and the Australian Banana Growers Council 38 However the test used the Dita PCR 39 40 was questioned after this detection was reported and is no longer used by BQ 37 A dissection of the tree trunk showed none of the usual symptoms of Fusarium infiltration 37 May 18 Another 18 samples of unspecified individual s from the same farm tested negative 37 BQ decided to only use vegetative compatibility groups and molecular diagnostics from then on 37 First legitimate detection later in the year in Tully Queensland 31 36 2017 edit Queensland University of Technology researchers located a gene RGA2 which is present but unexpressed in Cavendish which they found expressed and effective against TR4 in the diploid M a ssp malaccensis 41 2018 edit As of 13 July 2018 update TR4 is found widely throughout Southeast Asia 36 4 2020 edit As of November 2020 update TR4 was still only found on five plantations in the same area due to this government and industry response 38 Queensland s response to TR4 has been of interest to countries in Latin America as TR4 moves into that region for the first time 38 As of 13 November 2020 update TR4 is found in Laos Vietnam Taiwan Malaysia Borneo Indonesia mainland China Philippines Jordan Mozambique Pakistan Lebanon Oman India and North Queensland in Australia 31 2021 edit In April the first detection in Peru occurred in the Department of Piura and on the 11th the National Service for Agricultural Health declared a phytosanitary emergency for the whole country Ecuador had already been inspecting imports at the border due to Colombia s detection and then increased inspections further in April 42 43 The appearance of TR4 in Peru threatens its 170 000 hectares 420 000 acres of plantations 44 Subtropical Race 4 STR4 edit For the causative organism and its biology see Foc Subtropical Race 4 Subtropical Race 4 STR4 is a subtropical race and does not become symptomatic on Cavendish until the trees are stressed by cold 36 As of 13 July 2018 update quarantines for STR4 are imposed over South East Queensland northern New South Wales and Western Australia 36 As of 13 November 2020 update STR4 is found in South East Queensland 31 Also found in Paspalum spp and Amaranthus spp in Australia 34 These weeds may be acting as sources of inoculum 4 Disease cycle editModern commercially farmed banana plants are reproduced asexually by replanting the plant s basal shoot that grows after the original plant has been cut down Being triploid the fruit contains no seeds and the male flower does not produce pollen suitable for pollination prohibiting sexual reproduction This causes all bananas of a single breed to be nearly genetically identical The fungus easily spreads from plant to plant because the individual plants defenses are nearly identical 45 The disease is dispersed by spores or infected material that travel in surface water or farming activities One of the biggest issues in spreading the disease is the means by which new banana plants are planted Suckers are taken from one plant and clonally propagated to grow new trees About 30 to 40 of suckers from a diseased plant are infected and not all show symptoms so the chance of growing a new already infected plant is fairly high Finally the disease is known to infect certain weeds without showing symptoms meaning it can survive in the absence of banana plants and remain undetected in a place where bananas are planted later 46 FOC is thought to persist only asexually as no sexual phase teleomorph has been observed Recombination events may occur via somatic hybridisation and the parasexual cycle 47 This means that the survival and dispersal of the disease relies on purely asexual spores and structures The disease survives in chlamydospores which are released as the plant dies and can survive in the soil for up to 30 years When the environment is ideal and there are host roots available fungus is attracted to root exudates these chlamydospores will germinate and hyphae will penetrate the roots initiating infection There is an increase in the number of symptomatic plants when inflorescences emerge and the highest disease incidence occurs right before harvest 46 Once infected microconidia are produced and proliferate within the vessels of the plant s vascular system Macroconidia are another asexual spore that tends to be found on the surface of plants killed by Panama disease 48 Infection is systemic moving through the vascular system and causing yellowing and buckling that starts in older leaves and progresses to younger leaves until the entire plant dies 46 Dispersal edit Splash by rainfall movement of contaminated soil and movement of contaminated propagation materials are the major means of dispersal of Foc Dispersal by wind alone remains unproven and while animals can test positive for Foc on their outer surfaces it remains unproven whether they can be effective vectors 4 History editGros Michel devastation era edit The Gros Michel was the only type of banana eaten in the United States from the late 19th century until after World War II The disease was serious and diagnosed in Panama banana plantations of Central America Over several decades the fungus spread from Panama to neighboring countries moving north through Costa Rica to Guatemala and south into Colombia and Ecuador The banana industry was in a serious crisis so a new banana thought to be immune to Panama disease was found and adopted the Cavendish In a few years the devastated plantations resumed business as usual and the transition went smoothly in the American market Shortly thereafter Malaysia entered the banana growing business Cavendish banana plantations were new to that country in the 1980s but they rapidly expanded to meet the demand Thousands of acres of rain forests and former palm oil plantations were shifted to banana production Within a few years though the new plants began to die While it took several years to find the cause was ultimately attributed back to Panama disease Although the Cavendish was then thought to be immune it was immune only to the strain of the fungus that destroyed the Gros Michel The version that annihilated the Gros Michel was found only in the Western Hemisphere but the version found in Malaysian soil was different and the Cavendish is susceptible to it It killed and spread faster inspiring more panic than its earlier counterpart in Panama The newly discovered strain of F oxysporum was named tropical race 4 TR4 TR4 devastation era edit Tropical Race 4 TR4 was discovered in Taiwan in 1989 49 In July 2013 members of OIRSA a Latin American regional organisation for plant and animal health produced a contingency plan specific to TR4 for its nine member countries Belize Costa Rica Dominican Republic El Salvador Guatemala Honduras Mexico Nicaragua and Panama The plan is only available in Spanish 50 In March 2015 Latin America growers met to create a regional defense effort and planned to meet again in September or October of that year No specific regional measures are in place Ecuadorian growers requested the government to fumigate all containers 51 Scientists are trying to modify the banana plant to make it resist Panama disease and many other serious banana afflictions ranging from fungal bacterial and viral infections to nematodes and beetles Researchers are combing remote jungles searching for new wild bananas Hybrid bananas are being created in the hope of generating a new variety with strong resistance to diseases Some who believe the best hope for a more resilient banana is through genetic engineering However the resulting fruit also needs to taste good ripen in a predictable amount of time travel long distances undamaged and be easy to grow in great quantities Currently no cultivar or hybrid meets all of these criteria Australian quarantine edit In Queensland a farm in Tully 1 500 kilometres 900 mi north of Brisbane was quarantined and some plants were destroyed after TR4 was detected on March 3 2015 After an initial shutdown of the infected farm truckloads of fruit left in April with harvesting allowed to resume under strict biosecurity arrangements The government says it is not feasible to eradicate the fungus Researchers like Gert Kema based at Wageningen University The Netherlands say the disease will continue to spread despite efforts to contain it as long as susceptible varieties are being grown 52 The disease was again detected in Tully in July 2017 prompting Biosecurity Queensland to impose quarantine conditions 53 Outside experts were brought in to review Biosecurity Queensland s performance 15 February to 24 May 2021 Their assessment credits BQ with quick and effective response which is being emulated by other countries Thus far TR4 continues to be contained to the Tully Valley only and containment is thought to be possible as long as accidental human movement and transport in flowing water can be halted 54 Spread to Colombia edit In August 2019 authorities in Colombia declared a national emergency after confirming that Panama disease had reached Latin America Once you see it it is too late and it has likely already spread outside that zone without recognition said one expert quoted by National Geographic 21 Disease management editAs fungicides are largely ineffective there are few options for managing Panama disease 8 Chemical sterilisation of the soil with methyl bromide significantly reduced incidence of the disease but was found to be effective for only three years after which the pathogen had recolonised the fumigated areas 55 Injecting the host plants with carbendazim and potassium phosphonate appears to provide some control but results have been inconclusive Heat treatment of soil has also been tried in the Philippines but the pathogen is likely to reinvade the treated area 5 The greatest hope for managing this disease in infested soils is the development of genetic modifications that will provide resistant cultivars 56 57 Early research into Foc often was conducted by large companies with a financial interest in banana productivity especially the United Fruit Company Among UFC s notable pathologists was Frederick Wellman in the 1920s 58 Modified bananas developed in collaboration by Ugandan and Belgian scientists were reported in 2008 to be grown experimentally in Uganda 59 In Australia the movement sharing and sale of propagation material is heavily restricted especially between states to slow down the combined threat of TR4 Bunchy Top and leaf spot 60 The RGA2 gene is as of 2017 update totally effective against TR4 It is unexpressed in Cavendish but has been found expressed in the diploid M a ssp malaccensis It may be possible to produce an expressing Cavendish with CRISPR 41 Several bacterially derived volatile organic compounds have been found by Yuan et al 2012 to be selectively toxic to Foc Various alkylated benzenes various phenols various naphthalenes benzothiazole 2 ethyl 1 hexanol 2 undecanol 2 nonanone 2 decanone 2 undecanone nonanal and decanal 61 Currently fungicides and other chemical and biological control agents have proven fairly unsuccessful or only successful in vitro or in greenhouses in the face of Panama disease of bananas The most commonly used practices include mostly sanitation and quarantine practices to prevent the spread of Panama disease out of infected fields However the most effective tool against Panama disease is the development of banana plants resistant to Fusarium oxysporum f sp cubense 23 The clonal reproduction of banana has led to a consequential lack of other varieties Efforts are being made to produce resistant varieties but with bananas being triploids which do not produce seeds this is not an easy task Creating clones from tissue cultures rather than suckers has proven somewhat successful in breeding resistant varieties although these tend to have decreased success in stress tolerance yield or other beneficial traits necessary for commercial varieties 46 Nevertheless these efforts are leading to the best control measure for Panama disease of banana In 2017 a disease resistance gene RGA2 was transformed into Cavendish bananas which showed disease resistance to Fusarium wilt tropical race 4 One specific transformed line which consisted of eight plants showed resistance in the field for all of them The field trial lasted three years and the plants exhibited a yield drag 62 Taiwanese researchers believe that the onset of TR4 was linked to soil degradation caused by the use of chemical fertilizers 63 Hong et al 2020 achieved significant suppression with a chilli pepper banana rotation This success is not merely applicable to Musa or even crops in general it suggests that a similar rotation concept in livestock is advisable 64 The resistance of different banana cultivars to the pathogen is under scrutiny 65 The FAO provides a sanitation and diagnostic manual 23 Banana breeding impeded by triploidy edit One major impediment to breeding bananas is polyploidy Gros Michel and Cavendish bananas are triploid and thus attempts at meiosis in the plant s ovules cannot produce a viable gamete Only rarely does the first reduction division in meiosis in the plants flowers tidily fail completely resulting in a euploid triploid ovule which can be fertilized by normal haploid pollen from a diploid banana variety a whole stem of bananas would contain only a few seeds and sometimes none As a result the resulting new banana variety is tetraploid and thus contains seeds the market for bananas is not accustomed to bananas with seeds Experience showed that where both meiosis steps failed causing a heptaploid seedling or when the seedling is aneuploid results are not as good citation needed Second generation breeding using those new tetraploids as both parents has tended not to yield good results because the first generation contains the Gros Michel triploid gene set intact plus possibly useful features in the added fourth chromosome set but in the second generation the Gros Michel gene set has been broken up by meiosis The Honduras Foundation for Agricultural Research cultivates several varieties of the Gros Michel They have succeeded in producing a few seeds by hand pollinating the flowers with pollen from diploid seeded bananas 66 See also editList of banana and plantain diseases Black sigatoka a leaf spot disease of banana plants caused by the ascomycete fungus Mycosphaerella fijiensis Morelet References edit a b c d e Ploetz R C 2015 Fusarium Wilt of Banana Phytopathology 105 12 1512 1521 a b c Stover R H 1962 Fusarial Wilt Panama Disease of Bananas and otherMusaspecies Phytopathological Papers Vol 4 Royal Botanic Gardens Kew Commonwealth Mycological Institute pp vi 117 ISBN 978 0000000859 OCLC 3494840 Stover Robert H Simmonds N W eds August 10 1987 Bananas Tropical Agriculture Series 3 ed Harlow Essex England New York City Longman Scientific amp Technical Wiley pp 1 468 ISBN 978 0 470 20684 3 OCLC 13008247 a b c d e f g h i j Dita Miguel Barquero Marcia Heck Daniel Mizubuti Eduardo S G Staver Charles P 2018 10 19 Fusarium Wilt of Banana Current Knowledge on Epidemiology and Research Needs Toward Sustainable Disease Management Frontiers in Plant Science 9 Frontiers 1468 doi 10 3389 fpls 2018 01468 ISSN 1664 462X PMC 6202804 PMID 30405651 a b c d e f g h Ploetz Randy C 2000 Panama Disease A Classic and Destructive Disease of Banana Plant Health Progress 1 American Phytopathological Society APS 10 doi 10 1094 PHP 2000 1204 01 HM S2CID 12228953 Hansford C G 1923 The Panama Disease of Bananas Jamaica Department of Agriculture p 1 Thomas Adelle Baptiste April Martyr Koller Rosanne Pringle Patrick Rhiney Kevon 2020 10 17 Climate Change and Small Island Developing States Annual Review of Environment and Resources 45 1 Annual Reviews 1 27 doi 10 1146 annurev environ 012320 083355 ISSN 1543 5938 a b c Ploetz R C Pegg K G 2000 Jones D R ed Diseases of Banana Abaca and Enset Wallingford Oxfordshire England United Kingdom Centre for Agriculture and Bioscience International pp 143 159 ISBN 978 0 85199 355 3 OCLC 41347037 Garcia Bastidas F A Quintero Vargas J C Ayala Vasquez M Schermer T Seidl M F Santos Paiva M Noguera A M Aguilera Galvez C Wittenberg A Hofstede R Sorensen A Kema G H J 2020 First Report of Fusarium Wilt Tropical Race 4 in Cavendish Bananas Caused by Fusarium odoratissimum in Colombia Plant Disease 104 3 American Phytopathological Society APS 994 doi 10 1094 PDIS 09 19 1922 PDN a b c Staver Charles Pemsl Diemuth E Scheerer Lars Perez Vicente Luis Dita Miguel 2020 07 06 Ex Ante Assessment of Returns on Research Investments to Address the Impact of Fusarium Wilt Tropical Race 4 on Global Banana Production Frontiers in Plant Science 11 Frontiers 844 doi 10 3389 fpls 2020 00844 ISSN 1664 462X PMC 7357546 PMID 32733497 Gittleson Kim 2018 02 01 Battling to save the world s bananas BBC Retrieved 2019 09 30 a b c Molina A B Fabregar E Sinohin V G Yi G Viljoen A 2009 Recent occurrence of Fusarium oxysporum f sp cubense tropical race 4 in Asia Acta Horticulturae 828 International Society for Horticultural Science ISHS 109 116 doi 10 17660 actahortic 2009 828 10 hdl 2263 12191 ISSN 0567 7572 Ploetz Randy C 2015 Management of Fusarium wilt of banana A review with special reference to tropical race 4 Crop Protection 73 International Association for the Plant Protection Sciences Elsevier 7 15 Bibcode 2015CrPro 73 7P doi 10 1016 j cropro 2015 01 007 ISSN 0261 2194 S2CID 86468883 Koeppel Dan 2005 06 19 Can this fruit be saved Popular Science Retrieved 2011 01 03 Ploetz R C 2006 Panama disease an old nemesis rears its ugly head part 2 the cavendish era and beyond Plant Health Progress 1 17 a b Ordonez N M F Seidl C Waalwijk A Drenth A Kilian B P Thomma R C Ploetz and G H Kema 2015 Worse comes to worst bananas and Panama disease when plant and pathogen clones meet PLoS pathogens 11 11 e1005197 Garcia Bastidas F N Ordonez J Konkol M Al Qasim Z Naser M Abdelwali N Salem C Waalwijk R C Ploetz and G H J Kema 2014 First Report of Fusarium oxysporum f sp cubense Tropical Race 4 Associated with Panama Disease of Banana outside Southeast Asia Plant Disease 98 5 694 694 Hung T N N Q Hung D Mostert A Viljoen C P Chao and A Molina 2017 First report of Fusarium wilt on Cavendish bananas caused by Fusarium oxysporum f sp cubense tropical race 4 VCG 01213 16 in Vietnam Plant Disease PDIS 08 17 1140 PDN Chittarath K D Mostert K S 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PMID 30461350 Ploetz R C 2005 Panama disease an old nemesis rears its ugly head part 1 the beginnings of the banana export trades Plant Health Progress December 1 10 Waite B H Dunlap V C 1953 Preliminary host range studies with Fusarium oxysporum f sp cubense Plant Disease Reporter 37 United States Department of Agriculture 79 80 a b c d e f Panama disease tropical race 4 TR4 Business Queensland Queensland Government 2020 11 13 Archived from the original on 18 April 2020 Retrieved 2021 02 06 Waite B H 1963 Wilt of Heliconia spp caused by Fusarium oxysporum f sp cubense Race 3 Tropical Agriculture Trinidad 40 299 305 Ploetz Randy C 2006 Fusarium Wilt of Banana Is Caused by Several Pathogens Referred to as Fusarium oxysporum f sp cubense Phytopathology 96 6 American Phytopathological Society 653 656 doi 10 1094 phyto 96 0653 ISSN 0031 949X PMID 18943184 a b Pittaway P A Nasir Nasril Pegg K G 1999 Soil receptivity and host pathogen dynamics in soils naturally infested with Fusarium oxysporum f sp cubense the cause of Panama disease in bananas Australian Journal of Agricultural Research 50 4 CSIRO Publishing Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation 623 doi 10 1071 a98152 ISSN 0004 9409 a b Hennessy Chelsea Walduck Geoff Daly Andrew Padovan Anna 2005 Weed hosts of Fusarium oxysporum f sp cubense tropical race 4 in northern Australia Australasian Plant Pathology 34 1 Springer Science and Business Media LLC 115 Bibcode 2005AuPP 34 115H doi 10 1071 ap04091 ISSN 0815 3191 S2CID 13097833 a b c d e Panama disease tropical race 4 TR4 Business Queensland Queensland Agriculture Department 2020 11 13 Archived from the original on 22 December 2018 Retrieved 2021 02 06 a b c d e f g TR4 testing under the microscope Australian Banana Growers Australian Banana Growers Council 2015 10 03 Retrieved 2021 02 06 a b c d Australian Biosecurity Awards 2020 Round 2 award recipients PDF Australian Department of Agriculture Water and the Environment November 2020 Dita 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Ecuador amidst the banana pandemic experts call for public private cooperation to battle the scourge Inter American Institute for Cooperation on Agriculture 2021 04 20 Retrieved 2021 05 10 Burton Reg 2015 03 04 Panama disease threatens NQ bananas Fairfax Media a b c d Hwang Shin Chuan Ko Wen Hsuing June 2004 Cavendish Banana Cultivars Resistant to Fusarium Wilt Acquired through Somaclonal Variation in Taiwan Plant Disease 88 6 580 588 doi 10 1094 pdis 2004 88 6 580 PMID 30812575 M J Carlile S C Watkinson G W Gooday 2001 Parasites and Mutualistic Symbionts in The Fungi Second Edition Eds same as authors Academic Press pp 363 460 Fusarium oxysporum f sp cubense ProMusa July 2017 Retrieved 25 October 2017 REYNOLDS MATT A Fungus Could Wipe Out the Banana Forever Wired Retrieved 26 February 2020 https www oirsa org contenido biblioteca PlandecontingenciacontraFocR4TOIRSA pdf bare URL PDF Tropical race 4 TR4 Sedgman Phoebe 4 June 2015 There Might Be No Saving the World s Top Banana Bloomberg com Retrieved 2015 06 06 McKillop Charlie 13 July 2017 Panama disease outbreak on Queensland banana farm prompts quarantine restrictions Australian Broadcasting Corporation Retrieved 27 July 2017 Pegg Kenneth Summerell Brett O Neill Wayne 2021 Panama TR4 Epidemiological Review PDF Biosecurity Queensland Herbert J A and Marx D 1990 Short term control of Panama disease in South Africa Phytophylactica 22 339 340 Progress in protoplast culture and somatic hybridization in banana Musa spp En cnki com cn Archived from the original on 2011 08 15 Retrieved 2011 01 03 Ortiz R Ferris R S B Vuylsteke D R 1995 Banana and plantain breeding In Gowen S ed Bananas and Plantains Dordrecht Springer Netherlands Imprint Springer pp 110 146 xv 533 ISBN 978 0 412 36870 7 OCLC 840308637 ISBN 978 94 011 0737 2 ISBN 978 94 010 4317 5 McCook Stuart Peterson Paul D 2020 08 25 The Geopolitics of Plant Pathology Frederick Wellman Coffee Leaf Rust and Cold War Networks of Science Annual Review of Phytopathology 58 1 Annual Reviews 181 199 doi 10 1146 annurev phyto 082718 100109 ISSN 0066 4286 PMID 32853100 S2CID 221359919 Koeppel Dan 30 May 2008 Banana R I P The Scientist Archived from the original on 2012 06 15 Retrieved 2011 01 03 Biosecurity Risk Sharing bits and suckers Australian Banana Growers Australian Banana Growers 2019 02 01 Archived from the original on April 11 2021 Retrieved 2021 04 11 Cellini Antonio Spinelli Francesco Donati Irene Ryu Choong Min Kloepper Joseph W 2021 Bacterial volatile compound based tools for crop management and quality Trends in Plant Science 26 9 Cell Press 968 983 doi 10 1016 j tplants 2021 05 006 hdl 11585 829792 ISSN 1360 1385 PMID 34147324 Dale James et al November 14 2017 Transgenic Cavendish bananas with resistance to Fusarium wilt tropical race 4 Nature Communications 8 1 1496 Bibcode 2017NatCo 8 1496D doi 10 1038 s41467 017 01670 6 ISSN 2041 1723 PMC 5684404 PMID 29133817 Chia nan Lin 26 February 2020 ICDF is helping other nations with banana disease taipeitimes com Taipei Times Retrieved 1 March 2020 Peixoto Raquel S Harkins Derek M Nelson Karen E 2021 02 16 Advances in Microbiome Research for Animal Health Annual Review of Animal Biosciences 9 1 Annual Reviews 289 311 doi 10 1146 annurev animal 091020 075907 ISSN 2165 8102 PMID 33317323 S2CID 229177591 Companioni B Mora N Diaz L Perez A Arzola M Espinosa P Hernandez M de la Caridad Ventura J Perez MC Santos R Lorenzo JC 2006 Differentiating resistance to Fusarium oxysporum f sp cubense strain 1 culture filtrates in banana leaves PDF Biotecnologia Aplicada 23 2 Archived from the original PDF on 2011 07 18 Retrieved 2011 01 03 Carla Helfferich 1990 Battling for Bananas Alaska Science Forum Archived from the original on 2008 02 23 Retrieved 2008 06 02 Further reading editKoeppel Dan 2019 03 18 Can this fruit be saved Popular Science Retrieved 2021 12 21 discusses the disease threat to banana crops Lovett Brian 2021 06 24 Clone Wars How Fusarium Fungi Control the Banana Industry American Society for Microbiology Retrieved 2021 12 21 less technical explanation External links edit Fusarium wilt of banana on ProMusa s Musapedia Can This Fruit be Saved Fusarium Wilt A global threat to the banana Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Panama disease amp oldid 1217346932, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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