Dutch
elm disease
Dutch elm
disease has often been referenced as one of the most destructive plant diseases
known to man. The disease itself is caused by the ascomycete Ophiostoma ulmi
(ascomycete is a grouping of fungus of the
phylum Ascomycota that are characterized by
bearing sexual spores in a specialized sac) in
association with a secondary vector the scolytid beetles. Together with a this
particular type of elm bark beetle, the disease has infected thousands of elm
trees the world over and has had serious implications for forest ecosystems far
and wide.
The particular
historical and geographical origins of this phenomenon are difficult to trace
with any degree of certainty but it is known that the disease appeared at
several locations in northwest Europe around 1918-1921. Following its initial
observation, it quickly spread across Europe and overseas to North America, through
the Balkans, Turkey, and Ukraine and appeared in Central Asia some twenty years
later. This rapid spread was the sign of the first epidemics breaking out in
the 1920s and 1930s. Research however varies greatly as to where the origins of
the disease itself originated. There is evidence to support the disease’s
initial origins as Himalayan, European, or Chinese. The most popular of these
hypotheses is that the disease began in China and later spread into Europe. This
'China hypothesis' has been based primarily on two lines of evidence. the first
being the high level of resistance to the
disease that the Chinese elm species have shown when compared to species
of elm in Europe and North America. This resistance suggests that the fungus (Ophiostoma
ulmi) may have evolved alongside the tree, explaining the more balanced
relationship that has been observed. The second of the two lines of evidence
that has been used to support the China hypothesis is the high species
diversity of the Chinese elm. This point suggests that China could have been
the evolutionary hub and consequently the hub of some of its diseases that it
is associated with.
Ophiostoma ulmi
is estimated to have made it to the United States by the early 1920s. It was
brought in by unknowing furniture makers who imported European elm logs for use
in making veneer grade products such as cabinets and tables. It has been
predicted that some of the beetle vectors of the Dutch elm disease pathogens,
the scolytid
beetles, had been brought into the United
States from Europe, years before the fungi itself was ever introduced.
Dutch scientist Marie Beatrice Schwarz was credited with
having been the first to have identified the agent that causes the disease. The
disease would later come to be called Dutch Elms Disease.
Prior to any outbreaks of the disease within the United
States, elm trees were commonly used as street trees and were planted widely
along walkways and roads in affective monocultures. Monoculture is cited as the
main reason why Dutch Elm Disease had such devastating results on the towns and
cities of the United States, with an estimated 40 million American elm trees
have been killed as a result of the introduction of the disease.
The Dutch Elm Disease epidemics can be used as an example to
help illustrate the value of diversity in plant populations, as well as the
myriad of dangers inherent in globalization and the transportation of plant
materials around the world.
Efforts to eradicate the disease in the United States have been
generally unsuccessful. Some common steps that can be taken to prevent rapid
spread include the aforementioned avoidance of planting monocultures of elm
trees, the rapid removal of any and all dead or dying tree segments that are
affected, and the breakage of root grafts between elms that are growing
adjacently. For these measures to make a difference, diligent monitoring and
inspection are required. Chemical management options for managing the disease
have also been explored but are not widely used, as the insecticides used in
efforts to kill the beetle vectors of the disease are expensive and not particularly
effective (in addition to the negative ecological implications of heavy
chemical use). As for a long term solution to the disease, breeding programs
aimed at developing disease-resistant elms have been put in place. These
programs vary in their practices, with some using Asian elm species that have
high resistance to Dutch elm disease and attempting to introduce these traits
to native elms. Other programs have targeted native elms directly by using the
select few specimens that have shown natural resistance to the disease and
cloning these individuals.
By: Sabrina Smits
By: Sabrina Smits
(Sherald)
Bibliography
Brasier, C. M. (1990). China and the origins of
Dutch elm disease: an appraisal. Plant Pathology , 39, 5-16.
D’Arcy, C. J. (2000).
Dutch elm disease. Retrieved University of Illinois, from American
Phytopathological Society:
http://www.apsnet.org/edcenter/intropp/lessons/fungi/ascomycetes/Pages/DutchElm.aspx
Sherald, J. Dutch
elm disease symptoms.
http://plantdiagnostics.umd.edu/level3.cfm?causeID=1208.
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