eprintid: 5449 rev_number: 10 eprint_status: archive userid: 128 dir: disk0/00/00/54/49 datestamp: 2012-02-13 09:16:49 lastmod: 2013-09-16 07:35:32 status_changed: 2012-02-13 09:16:49 type: article metadata_visibility: show contact_email: Library-ICRISAT@CGIAR.ORG creators_name: Savary, Serge creators_name: Nelson, Andrew creators_name: Sparks, Adam H. creators_name: Willocquet, Laetitia creators_name: Duveiller, Etienne creators_name: Mahuku, George creators_name: Forbes, Greg creators_name: Garrett, Karen A. creators_name: Hodson, David creators_name: Padgham, Jon creators_name: Pande, S. creators_name: Sharma, M creators_name: Yuen, Jonathan creators_name: Djurle, Annika icrisatcreators_name: Pande, S. icrisatcreators_name: Sharma, M affiliation: International Rice Research Institute (IRRI), Los Baños affiliation: ICRISAT(Patancheru) country: Philippines country: India title: International Agricultural Research Tackling the Effects of Global and Climate Changes on Plant Diseases in the Developing World ispublished: pub subjects: s2.4 full_text_status: restricted abstract: Climate change has a number of observed, anticipated, or possible consequences on crop health worldwide. Global change, on the other hand, incorporates a number of drivers of change, including global population increase, natural resource evolution, and supply–demand shifts in markets, from local to global. Global and climate changes interact in their effects on global ecosystems. Identifying and quantifying the impacts of global and climate changes on plant diseases is complex. A number of nonlinear relationships, such as the injury (epidemic)–damage (crop loss) relationship, are superimposed on the interplay among the three summits of the disease triangle (host, pathogen, environment). Work on a range of pathosystems involving rice, peanut, wheat, and coffee has shown the direct linkage and feedback between production situations and crop health. Global and climate changes influence the effects of system components on crop health. The combined effects of global and climate changes on diseases vary from one pathosystem to another within the tetrahedron framework (humans, pathogens, crops, environment) where human beings, from individual farmers to consumers to entire societies, interact with hosts, pathogens, and the environment. This article highlights international phytopathological research addressing the effects of global and climate changes on plant diseases in a range of crops and pathosystems. date: 2011 date_type: published publication: Plant Disease volume: 95 number: 10 publisher: American Phytopathological Society pagerange: 1204-1216 id_number: http://dx.doi.org/10.1094/PDIS-04-11-0316 refereed: TRUE issn: 0191-2917 official_url: http://apsjournals.apsnet.org/loi/pdis related_url_url: http://scholar.google.co.in/scholar?as_q=%22International+Agricultural+Research+Tackling+the+Effects+of+Global+and+Climate+Changes+on+Plant+Diseases+in+the+Developing+World%22&num=10&btnG=Search+Scholar&as_epq=&as_oq=&as_eq=&as_occt=title&as_sauthors=&as_ citation: Savary, Serge and Nelson, Andrew and Sparks, Adam H. and Willocquet, Laetitia and Duveiller, Etienne and Mahuku, George and Forbes, Greg and Garrett, Karen A. and Hodson, David and Padgham, Jon and Pande, S. and Sharma, M and Yuen, Jonathan and Djurle, Annika (2011) International Agricultural Research Tackling the Effects of Global and Climate Changes on Plant Diseases in the Developing World. Plant Disease, 95 (10). pp. 1204-1216. ISSN 0191-2917 document_url: http://oar.icrisat.org/5449/1/International%20Agricultural%20Research.pdf