From BBC News
20 May 2013 Last updated at 23:05 ET Irish potato famine pathogen identified
By Helen Briggs BBC News
Scientists have used plant samples
collected in the mid-19th Century to identify the pathogen that caused the Irish
potato famine.
A plant pest that causes potato blight spread to Ireland in 1845 triggering a famine that killed one million people. DNA extracted from museum specimens shows the strain that changed history is different from modern day epidemics, and is probably now extinct.
Other strains continue to attack potato and tomato crops around the world. The fungus-like infection causes annual losses of enough potatoes to feed hundreds of millions of people a year.
A team led by The Sainsbury Laboratory, Norwich, traced the global spread of potato blight from the early 1800s to the present day. Until now, it has been unclear how early strains of Phytophthora infestans are related to those present in the world today.
Researchers in the UK, Germany and the US analysed dried
leaves kept in collections in museums at Kew Royal Botanical Gardens, UK, and
Botanische Staatssammlung Munchen, Germany.
High-tech DNA sequencing techniques allowed them to decode ancient DNA from
the pathogen in samples stored as early as 1845. These were compared with modern-day genetic types from Europe, Africa and the
Americas, giving an insight into the evolution of the pathogen. "This strain was different from all the modern strains that we analysed - most likely it is new to science," Prof Sophien Kamoun of The Sainsbury Laboratory told BBC News. "We can't be sure but most likely it's gone extinct."
Treasures of knowledge
The researchers believe the strain - HERB-1 - emerged in the early 1800s and continued to spread globally throughout the 19th Century. Only in the 20th Century, after new potato varieties were introduced, was it replaced by another Phytophthora infestans strain, US-1, which is now dominant around the world.
The research, published in the new open-access scientific journal, eLife, suggests crop breeding methods may have an impact on the evolution of pathogens.
"Perhaps this strain became extinct when the first resistant potato varieties were bred at the beginning of the 20th Century," said Kentaro Yoshida from The Sainsbury Laboratory. "What is certain is that these findings will greatly help us to understand the dynamics of emerging pathogens. This type of work paves the way for the discovery of many more treasures of knowledge hidden in herbaria."
Commenting on the study, Professor Sir David Baulcombe of the Department of Plant Sciences at the University of Cambridge said it shows how we can use herb specimens to track biodiversity.
"It might be a revival in the fortunes or relevance of dried plants," he said. "It illustrates very nicely the arms race over pathogens and their host."
Phytophthora infestans - which causes potato blight - emerged in the US in 1844, and spread to Europe the following year. [Hmmm, interesting. Many experts now believe that the pathogen that caused the mis-named "Spanish Flu" pandemic near the end of WWI (it killed millions of people around the world) originated in the United States as well.]
The summer of 1845 was mild but very wet, giving the perfect conditions for the blight to spread.
The failure of the crop in Ireland - which relied heavily on potatoes as a food source - led to the deaths of about a million people from starvation and disease between 1846 and 1851. It is hard to wrap my mind around this, but this kind of thing is still happening today, sadly, in parts of the world that "civilized" people find easy to ignore.
What the article does not mention is that at least that many people (one million) also left Ireland, never to return, as a result of the great famine that ensued. Some went willingly, some went reluctantly, some were literally forced onto ill-equipped ships to cross the Atlantic to the United States. What was Ireland's great sad loss, though, was ultimately our great gain.
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