Ug99 is a lineage of wheat stem rust (Puccinia graminis f. sp. tritici), which is present in wheat fields in several countries in Africa and the Middle East and is predicted to spread rapidly through these regions and possibly further afield, potentially causing a wheat production disaster that would affect food security worldwide.[1] In 2005 the noted green revolution pioneer Norman Borlaug brought great attention to the problem, and most subsequent efforts can be traced to his advocacy.[2] It can cause up to 100% crop losses and is virulent against many resistance genes which have previously protected wheat against stem rust.
Puccinia graminis var. Ug99 | |
---|---|
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Fungi |
Division: | Basidiomycota |
Class: | Pucciniomycetes |
Order: | Pucciniales |
Family: | Pucciniaceae |
Genus: | Puccinia |
Species: | P. graminis |
Forma specialis: | P. g. f. sp. tritici |
Varietas: | P. g. var. Ug99 |
Trionomial name | |
Puccinia graminis var. Ug99 | |
Races | |
see text |
Although Ug99-resistant varieties of wheat do exist,[2] a screen of 200,000 wheat varieties used in 22 African and Asian countries found that only 5–10% of the area of wheat grown in these countries consisted of varieties with adequate resistance.[1]
The original race of Ug99, which is designated as 'TTKSK' under the North American nomenclature system, was first detected in Uganda in 1998[3] and first characterised in 1999[3] (hence the name Ug99) and has since been detected in Kenya, Ethiopia, Eritrea, Sudan, Yemen, Iran, Tanzania, Mozambique, Zimbabwe, South Africa,[4] and Egypt. There are now 15 known races of Ug99.[5] They are all closely related and are believed to have evolved from a common ancestor, but differ in their virulence/avirulence profiles and the countries in which they have been detected.[1]
Genetics
editUg99 is the product of a type of somatic nuclear exchange event which has not been observed in other stem rust races.[6] During this event and thereafter the nuclei have not experienced recombination.[6]
Gene resistance
editUg99 and its variants differ from other strains of the Black Stem Rust (BSR) pathogen due to their ability to overcome resistance genes in wheat that have been durable against the BSR pathogen for decades.[7] These resistant Sr genes, of which 50 are known, give wheat different resistances to stem rust.[3] The virulence in Uganda was virulent against Sr31 and is specific to Ug99.[3] The massive losses of wheat that have occurred have been devastating, but in recent years the wheat rust epidemic has been effectively controlled through selection and breeding for additional Sr genes.[3] (In the decades since, however, Sr31-virulence has evolved in other strains in other locations.[8] Patpour et al., 2022 finds it in Spain and Siberia.)[8]
United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) researchers are testing genes to determine their Ug99 resistance, which will ultimately aid in the development of wheat varieties that will be able to fight off the rust. Resistance has been identified in a small number of spring wheat land races from North America – 23 out of 250 races with adult plant resistance, 27 out of 23,976 SNPs conveying APR, and only 9 races having seedling resistance.[9] This resistance was present without the Ug99 pathogen challenge being present in NA to drive its selection.[9] USDA has studied winter wheat land races where resistance is more probable.[10]
In addition to the research being conducted by the USDA, The United Kingdom’s Department for International Development (DFID) along with Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, announced in February 2011 that they will be granting $40 million to a global project led by Cornell University to combat virulent strains of Ug99.[11] The five-year grant to the Durable Rust Resistance in Wheat (DRRW) project supported attempts to identify new resistance genes as well as reproduce and distribute rust resistant wheat seeds to farmers.[11]
There has been a continuous process of development of new resistant cultivars and failure of those cultivars.[12] This demonstrates the need for continuous improvement.[12]
As of 2020[update] modern molecular and molecular genetics techniques are identifying quantitative trait loci (QTLs), particular cellular structures, and individual R genes more efficiently than ever before.[13] These will be needed given the continuing severe, worldwide threat Ug99 poses.[13][1]
Sr35 confers resistance to all other severe Pgt races and the original Ug99.[14] Salcedo et al., 2017 finds its Avr target, AvrSr35.[14] Races virulent on Sr35 benefit from nonfunctionalization of AvrSr35 by insertion of a mobile element.[14]
Races
editThere are 15 races of Ug99, which (under the North American nomenclature system) have the designations TTKSK, TTKSF, TTKST, TTTSK, TTKSP, PTKSK, PTKST, TTKSF+,[4] TTKTT, TTKTK, TTHSK, PTKTK, TTHST, TTKTT+, and TTHTT.[5] They are all closely related and are believed to have evolved from a common ancestor.[1]
TTKSK
editAlso known as PTKS.[15] The first Ug99 race to be characterised.[16][15] Like most Ug99 races, and unlike other stem rust varieties, it is virulent against the Sr gene Sr31;[16][15] also virulent against Sr38.[15] Avirulent against Sr24.[16][15] It was found in Uganda[15] in 1999, Kenya[16] in 2001,[5] Ethiopia in 2003,[5] Sudan and Yemen in 2006,[5] Iran in 2007,[5] and Tanzania[1] in 2009,[5] Eritrea in 2012,[5] and Rwanda and Egypt in 2014.[5]
TTKSF
editFirst detected in South Africa in 2000,[5] Zimbabwe 2009,[5] and Uganda in 2012.[5] Avirulent on Sr31.[5]
TTKST
editDiscovered in Kenya in 2006[16] was the first Ug99 race found to be virulent against Sr gene Sr24.[1][16] TTKST is now the predominant stem rust race in Kenya.[1] Virulent on Sr31.[5]
TTTSK
editFirst detected in Kenya in 2007,[5] Tanzania in 2009,[5] Ethiopia in 2010,[5] Uganda in 2012,[5] and Rwanda in 2014.[5] Virulent on Sr31 and Sr36.[5]
TTKSP
editFirst detected by Visser et al., 2011 in South Africa in 2007.[17][5] Avirulent on Sr31 and virulent on Sr24.[5]
PTKSK
editFirst detected in Ethiopia in 2007,[5] Kenya in 2009,[5] Yemen in 2009,[5] and South Africa in 2017.[5][18] Virulent on Sr31 and avirulent on Sr21.[5]
PTKST
editFirst detected in Ethiopia in 2007,[5] Kenya in 2008,[5] South Africa in 2009 by Visser et al., 2011,[17][5] Eritrea and Mozambique and Zimbabwe in 2010.[5] Virulent on Sr31 and Sr24, but avirulent on Sr21.[5]
TTKSF+
editFirst detected in both South Africa and Zimbabwe in 2010.[5] Virulent against Sr9h.[19][20][21] Avirulent on Sr31 but virulent on Sr9h.[5]
TTKTT
editFirst detected in Kenya in 2014.[5] Also detected in Iraq in 2019, the first such detection in the country.[5] Found in Nepal in 2023.[22] Virulent on Sr31, Sr24, and SrTmp.[5]
TTKTK
editFirst detected in Kenya,[5][23] Rwanda,[5][23] Uganda,[5][23] Eritrea,[5] and Egypt[5][23] in 2014. Virulent on Sr31 and SrTmp.[5]
TTHSK
editFirst detected in Kenya in 2014.[24] Differs from the original (TTKSK) by avirulence against Sr30.[24] Similar to TTHST.[24] Virulent on Sr31 but avirulent on Sr30.[5]
PTKTK
editFirst detected in Kenya in 2014.[24] Differs from PTKSK by virulence against SrTmp.[24] Differs from TTKTK by avirulence against Sr21.[24] Virulent on Sr31 and Sr24, but avirulent on Sr21.[5]
TTHST
editFirst detected in Kenya in 2013.[5] Virulent on Sr31 and Sr24, but avirulent on Sr30.[5]
TTKTT+
editFirst detected in Kenya in 2019.[5] Virulent to Sr31, Sr24, SrTmp, and Sr8155B1.[5]
TTHTT
editFirst detected in Kenya in 2020.[5] Virulent to Sr31, Sr24, and SrTmp, avirulent to Sr30.[5]
Timeline
edit1993
edit1998
edit- Severe stem rust infections observed in Uganda. Ug99 identified, characterised as having virulence on Sr31 and named.[25]
2000
edit- TTKSF detected in South Africa.[1]
2001
edit2003
edit2006
edit- TTKSK detected in Sudan and Yemen.[25]
- TTKST, a new variant of Ug99 with virulence to Sr24, detected in Kenya.[25]
2007
edit- TTTSK detected in Kenya.[1]
- TTKSP detected in South Africa by Visser et al., 2011.[17]
- PTKSK detected in Ethiopia.[1]
- PTKST detected in Ethiopia.[1]
2008
edit2009
edit- TTKSK detected in Tanzania.[1]
- TTKST detected in Tanzania.[1]
- TTTSK detected in Tanzania.[1]
- TTKSF detected in Zimbabwe.[1]
- PTKSK detected in Kenya.[1]
- PTKST detected in South Africa by Visser et al., 2011.[17]
2010
edit- TTKST detected in Eritrea.[4]
- PTKST detected in Eritrea.[4]
- PTKST detected in Mozambique.[4]
- PTKST detected in Zimbabwe.[4]
- TTKSF+ detected in South Africa.[4]
- TTKSF+ detected in Zimbabwe.[4]
2013
edit2014
edit- TTKTK confirmed in Egypt,[26] Kenya, Eritrea, Rwanda, and Uganda.[5]
- TTHSK confirmed in Kenya[5][24]
- PTKTK confirmed in Kenya[5][24]
- TTKTT confirmed in Kenya.[24]
- TTKST detected in Egypt.[26]
- TTKSK detected in Egypt.[26]
2017
edit- PTKSK confirmed in South Africa.[5]
2019
edit2020
edit2023
edit- TTKTT confirmed in Nepal.[22]
Geographic spread
editThis section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (November 2020) |
Because stem rust (as with many fungi) spreads its spores across long distances with the help of natural air currents, containment is difficult.[27] Advances in fluid mechanics which are commonly used for meteorology have also aided Ug99 dispersal prediction.[27] This is especially important for inter-continental, intermittent spread, such as from Eastern South Africa to Western Australia.[27]
China
editAlthough Ug99 has not yet reached China,[28] other stem rust races already have,[28] and an effort is under way to marry resistance against present races with future needs for resistance against Ug99 whenever it arrives.[28]
Lebanon
editAlthough Sr5, Sr21, Sr9e, Sr7b, Sr11, Sr6, Sr8a, Sr9g, Sr9b, Sr30, Sr17, Sr9a, Sr9d, Sr10, SrTmp, Sr38, and SrMcN are no longer effective in Lebanon, Sr11, Sr24, and Sr31 still are which is diagnostic for the absence of Ug99 from Lebanon.[29]
Iraq
editSouth Asia
editLow-levels of TTKTT were detected in Nepal in 2023, but surveillance has not revealed any propagation in the region.[22] As of 2013[update] it was the US Director of National Intelligence's assessment that Ug99 would arrive in South Asia soon, in the following few years. This was expected to cause worldwide supply disruptions because, although productivity was growing in Eastern Europe and could theoretically fill that gap, governments worldwide had shown a readiness to forbid exports.[30]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Singh, Ravi P.; Hodson, David P.; Huerta-Espino, Julio; Jin, Yue; Bhavani, Sridhar; Njau, Peter; Herrera-Foessel, Sybil; Singh, Pawan K.; Singh, Sukhwinder; Govindan, Velu (8 September 2011). "The Emergence of Ug99 Races of the Stem Rust Fungus is a Threat to World Wheat Production". Annual Review of Phytopathology. 49 (1). Annual Reviews: 465–481. doi:10.1146/annurev-phyto-072910-095423. ISSN 0066-4286. PMID 21568701. S2CID 24770327.
- ^ a b c d Gross, Michael (2013). "Pests on the move". Current Biology. 23 (19). Cell Press: R855–R857. Bibcode:2013CBio...23.R855G. doi:10.1016/j.cub.2013.09.034. ISSN 0960-9822. PMID 24251330. S2CID 15559913.
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- • Pretorius, Z. A.; Singh, R. P.; Wagoire, W. W.; Payne, T. S. (2000). "Detection of Virulence to Wheat Stem Rust Resistance Gene Sr31 in Puccinia graminis. f. sp. tritici in Uganda". Plant Disease. 84 (2). American Phytopathological Society: 203. doi:10.1094/pdis.2000.84.2.203b. ISSN 0191-2917. PMID 30841334. S2CID 73469939.
- • Dean, Ralph; Kan, Jan; Pretorius, Zacharias; Kosack, Kim; Pietro, Antonio; Spanu, Pietro; Rudd, Jason; Dickman, Marty; Kahmann, Regine; Ellis, Jeff; Foster, Gary (2012). "The Top 10 fungal pathogens in molecular plant pathology". Molecular Plant Pathology. 13 (4). Wiley-Blackwell: 414–430. doi:10.1111/j.1364-3703.2011.00783.x. ISSN 1464-6722. PMC 6638784. PMID 22471698. S2CID 18505064.
- • Singh, Ravi P.; Hodson, David P.; Huerta-Espino, Julio; Jin, Yue; Bhavani, Sridhar; Njau, Peter; Herrera-Foessel, Sybil; Singh, Pawan K.; Singh, Sukhwinder; Govindan, Velu (8 September 2011). "The Emergence of Ug99 Races of the Stem Rust Fungus is a Threat to World Wheat Production". Annual Review of Phytopathology. 49 (1). Annual Reviews: 465–481. doi:10.1146/annurev-phyto-072910-095423. ISSN 0066-4286. PMID 21568701. S2CID 24770327.
- • Singh, Ravi P.; Hodson, David P.; Huerta-Espino, Julio; Jin, Yue; Njau, Peter; Wanyera, Ruth; Herrera-Foessel, Sybil A.; Ward, Richard W. (2008). "Will Stem Rust Destroy the World's Wheat Crop?". Advances in Agronomy. Vol. 98. Elsevier. pp. 271–309/xiii+422. doi:10.1016/s0065-2113(08)00205-8. ISBN 9780123743558. ISSN 0065-2113. S2CID 55174564.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Hodson, D. P.; Grønbech-Hansen, J.; Lassen, P.; Alemayehu, Y.; Arista, J.; Sonder, K.; Kosina, P.; Moncada, P.; Nazari, K.; Park, R. F.; Pretorius, Z. A.; Szabo, L. J.; Fetch, T.; Jin, Y. "Tracking the Wheat Rust Pathogens" (PDF). 2012 Borlaug Global Rust Initiative Technical Workshop Proceedings. Borlaug Global Rust Initiative. Archived (PDF) from the original on 5 October 2019. Retrieved 28 November 2012.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh "Pathotype Tracker – Where is Ug99?". The International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center.
- ^ a b Li, Feng; Upadhyaya, Narayana M.; Sperschneider, Jana; Matny, Oadi; Nguyen-Phuc, Hoa; Mago, Rohit; Raley, Castle; Miller, Marisa E.; Silverstein, Kevin A. T.; Henningsen, Eva; Hirsch, Cory D.; Visser, Botma; Pretorius, Zacharias A.; Steffenson, Brian J.; Schwessinger, Benjamin; Dodds, Peter N.; Figueroa, Melania (7 November 2019). "Emergence of the Ug99 lineage of the wheat stem rust pathogen through somatic hybridisation". Nature Communications. 10 (1). Nature Portfolio: 5068. Bibcode:2019NatCo..10.5068L. doi:10.1038/s41467-019-12927-7. ISSN 2041-1723. PMC 6838127. PMID 31699975. S2CID 207916981.
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- • Bajgain, Prabin; Jin, Yue; Tsilo, Toi J.; Macharia, Godwin K.; Reynolds, Susan E.; Wanyera, Ruth; Anderson, James A. (14 May 2020). "Registration of KUWNSr, a wheat stem rust nested association mapping population". Journal of Plant Registrations. 14 (3). John Wiley & Sons, Inc.: 467–473. doi:10.1002/plr2.20043. ISSN 1936-5209. S2CID 219423451.
- ^ USDA Agricultural Research Service (2007). Action Plan to Minimize Impact of Ug99 Stem Rust in the United States (PDF) (Report) (1.01 ed.). USDA Agricultural Research Service. pp. 1–27. Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 October 2022.
- ^ a b McCandless, Linda (27 February 2011). "$40M grant to fight wheat pathogen that threatens global food security". Cornell Chronicle. Retrieved 5 October 2019.
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- • Fetch, Thomas; Park, Robert; Pretorius, Zacharias; Depauw, Ronald (2021). "Stem rust: its history in Kenya and research to combat a global wheat threat". Canadian Journal of Plant Pathology. 43 (sup2). Taylor & Francis: S275–S297. Bibcode:2021CaJPP..43S.275F. doi:10.1080/07060661.2021.1902860. ISSN 0706-0661. S2CID 233672540.
- • Pretorius, Zacharias A.; Prins, Renée; Wessels, Elsabet; Bender, Cornel M.; Visser, Botma; Boshoff, Willem H.P. (26 November 2020). "Accomplishments in wheat rust research in South Africa". South African Journal of Science. 116 (11/12). Academy of Science of South Africa: 1–8. doi:10.17159/sajs.2020/7688. ISSN 1996-7489. S2CID 229382857.
- ^ a b Deng, Yiwen; Ning, Yuese; Yang, Dong-Lei; Zhai, Keran; Wang, Guo-Liang; He, Zuhua (5 October 2020). "Molecular Basis of Disease Resistance and Perspectives on Breeding Strategies for Resistance Improvement in Crops". Molecular Plant. 13 (10). Cell Press: 1402–1419. doi:10.1016/j.molp.2020.09.018. ISSN 1674-2052. PMID 32979566. S2CID 221955936.
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- Li, Feng; Upadhyaya, Narayana; Sperschneider, Jana; Matny, Oadi; Nguyen-Phuc, Hoa; Mago, Rohit; Raley, Castle; Miller, Marisa; Silverstein, Kevin; Henningsen, Eva; Hirsch, Cory; Visser, Botma; Pretorius, Zacharias; Steffenson, Brian; Schwessinger, Benjamin; Dodds, Peter; Figueroa, Melania (2019). "Emergence of the Ug99 lineage of the wheat stem rust pathogen through somatic hybridisation". Nature Communications. 10 (1). Nature Portfolio: 5068. Bibcode:2019NatCo..10.5068L. doi:10.1038/s41467-019-12927-7. ISSN 2041-1723. PMC 6838127. PMID 31699975. S2CID 207916981. (FL ORCID 0000-0001-8528-4249.) (NMU ORCID 0000-0002-3052-0416.) (OM ORCID 0000-0002-8447-2886.) (HNP ORCID 0000-0001-9329-4287.) (KATS ORCID 0000-0002-4955-3218.) (EH ORCID 0000-0001-9619-3705.) (CDH ORCID 0000-0002-3409-758X.) (BJS ORCID 0000-0001-7961-5363.) (PND ORCID 0000-0003-0620-5923. GS N3w9QUUAAAAJ. RID D-1181-2009.) (MF ORCID 0000-0003-2636-661X. (RID R-7696-2017).
- This review cites this research.
- Salcedo, Andres; Rutter, William; Wang, Shichen; Akhunova, Alina; Bolus, Stephen; Chao, Shiaoman; Anderson, Nickolas; De Soto, Monica; Rouse, Matthew; Szabo, Les; Bowden, Robert; Dubcovsky, Jorge; Akhunov, Eduard (2017). "Variation in the AvrSr35 gene determines Sr35 resistance against wheat stem rust race Ug99". Science. 358 (6370). American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS): 1604–1606. Bibcode:2017Sci...358.1604S. doi:10.1126/science.aao7294. ISSN 0036-8075. PMC 6518949. PMID 29269474. S2CID 206664159.
- ^ a b c d e f Nagarajan, Subrahmaniam; Kogel, Hans J.; Zadoks, Jan C. (2012). "Epidemiology of Puccinia graminis f.sp. tritici-Ug99 in the Rift Valley "Flyway" from Uganda-Kenya to Yemen". Plant Health Progress. 13 (1). American Phytopathological Society: 31. doi:10.1094/php-2012-1114-01-rv. ISSN 1535-1025. S2CID 88243732.
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- • Jin, Yue; Szabo, Les J.; Pretorius, Zacharias A.; Singh, Ravi P.; Ward, R.; Fetch, T. (2008). "Detection of Virulence to Resistance Gene Sr24 Within Race TTKS of Puccinia graminis f. sp. tritici". Plant Disease. 92 (6). American Phytopathological Society: 923–926. doi:10.1094/pdis-92-6-0923. ISSN 0191-2917. PMID 30769714. S2CID 55431333.
- • Singh, Ravi P.; Hodson, David P.; Huerta-Espino, Julio; Jin, Yue; Bhavani, Sridhar; Njau, Peter; Herrera-Foessel, Sybil; Singh, Pawan K.; Singh, Sukhwinder; Govindan, Velu (8 September 2011). "The Emergence of Ug99 Races of the Stem Rust Fungus is a Threat to World Wheat Production". Annual Review of Phytopathology. 49 (1). Annual Reviews: 465–481. doi:10.1146/annurev-phyto-072910-095423. ISSN 0066-4286. PMID 21568701. S2CID 24770327.
- • Sparks, Donald L. (2008). Advances in Agronomy. Vol. 98. London: Elsevier. pp. xiii+422. ISBN 978-0-08-088814-9. ISSN 0065-2113. OCLC 302357009. : 281
- • Singh, Ravi P.; Hodson, David P.; Jin, Yue; Lagudah, Evans S.; Ayliffe, Michael A.; Bhavani, Sridhar; Rouse, Matthew N.; Pretorius, Zacharias A.; Szabo, Les J.; Huerta-Espino, Julio; Basnet, Bhoja R.; Lan, Caixia; Hovmøller, Mogens S. (2015). "Emergence and Spread of New Races of Wheat Stem Rust Fungus: Continued Threat to Food Security and Prospects of Genetic Control". Phytopathology. 105 (7). American Phytopathological Society: 872–884. doi:10.1094/phyto-01-15-0030-fi. ISSN 0031-949X. PMID 26120730. S2CID 205345605.
- ^ a b c d This review... Singh, Ravi P.; Hodson, David P.; Huerta-Espino, Julio; Jin, Yue; Bhavani, Sridhar; Njau, Peter; Herrera-Foessel, Sybil; Singh, Pawan K.; Singh, Sukhwinder; Govindan, Velu (8 September 2011). "The Emergence of Ug99 Races of the Stem Rust Fungus is a Threat to World Wheat Production". Annual Review of Phytopathology. 49 (1). Annual Reviews: 465–481. doi:10.1146/annurev-phyto-072910-095423. ISSN 0066-4286. PMID 21568701. S2CID 24770327. ...cites this study: Visser, B; Herselman, L; Park, RF; Karaoglu, H; Bender, CM; Pretorius, Z (2010). "Characterization of two new Puccinia graminis f. sp. tritici races within the Ug99 lineage in South Africa". Euphytica. 179: 119–127. doi:10.1007/s10681-010-0269-x. S2CID 6176783.
- ^ Terefe, T.; Pretorius, Z. A.; Visser, B.; Boshoff, W. H. P. (2019). "First Report of Puccinia graminis f. sp. tritici Race PTKSK, a Variant of Wheat Stem Rust Race Ug99, in South Africa". Plant Disease. 103 (6). American Phytopathological Society: 1421. doi:10.1094/pdis-11-18-1911-pdn. ISSN 0191-2917.
- ^ Randhawa, Mandeep S.; Singh, Ravi P.; Dreisigacker, Susanne; Bhavani, Sridhar; Huerta-Espino, Julio; Rouse, Matthew N.; Nirmala, Jayaveeramuthu; Sandoval-Sanchez, Maricarmen (30 November 2018). "Identification and Validation of a Common Stem Rust Resistance Locus in Two Bi-parental Populations". Frontiers in Plant Science. 9. Frontiers Media: 1788. doi:10.3389/fpls.2018.01788. ISSN 1664-462X. PMC 6283910. PMID 30555507.
- ^ Pretorius, Z. A.; Szabo, Les J.; Boshoff, W. H. P.; Herselman, L.; Visser, B. (2012). "First Report of a New TTKSF Race of Wheat Stem Rust (Puccinia graminis f. sp. tritici) in South Africa and Zimbabwe". Plant Disease. 96 (4). American Phytopathological Society: 590. doi:10.1094/pdis-12-11-1027-pdn. ISSN 0191-2917. PMID 30727416.
- ^ Rouse, Matthew N.; Nirmala, Jayaveeramuthu; Jin, Yue; Chao, Shiaoman; Fetch, Thomas G.; Pretorius, Zacharias A.; Hiebert, Colin W. (10 June 2014). "Characterization of Sr9h, a wheat stem rust resistance allele effective to Ug99". Theoretical and Applied Genetics. 127 (8). Springer Science+Business Media: 1681–1688. doi:10.1007/s00122-014-2330-y. ISSN 0040-5752. PMID 24913360. S2CID 2598581.
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External links
edit- "Ug99 stem rust on wheat crops and BGRI s efforts to tame this devastating disease High". 30 October 2012. Retrieved 25 August 2024 – via YouTube. Ug99 stem rust on wheat crops
- "BGRI – Borlaug Global Rust Initiative". BGRI – Borlaug Global Rust Initiative. Retrieved 25 August 2024. Borlaug Global Rust Initiative
- "Rust – Stem: Ug99 (Race TTKSK)". www.fao.org. Retrieved 25 August 2024. FAO