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The socio-economic challenges of managing pathogen evolution in agriculture

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ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rstb.2022.0012

Keywords

evolution; economics; pathogen; agriculture; integrated disease management

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Genetic resistance is crucial for managing infectious diseases in crops, but the rapid evolution of pathogens is causing resistance breakdown and posing a threat to disease control. Recent research has discovered strategies for deploying resistance genes to disrupt pathogen adaptation and prevent breakdown, but their practical implementation is currently limited.
Genetic resistance forms the foundation of infectious disease management in crops. However, rapid pathogen evolution is causing the breakdown of resistance and threatening disease control. Recent research efforts have identified strategies for resistance gene deployment that aim to disrupt pathogen adaptation and prevent breakdown. To date, there has been limited practical uptake of such strategies. In this paper, we focus on the socio-economic challenges associated with translating applied evolutionary research into scientifically informed management strategies to control pathogen adaptation. We develop a conceptual framework for the economic valuation of resistance and demonstrate that in addition to various direct benefits, resistance delivers considerable indirect and non-market value to farmers and society. Incentives for stakeholders to engage in stewardship strategies are complicated by the uncertain timeframes associated with evolutionary processes, difficulties in assigning ownership rights to genetic resources and lack of governance. These interacting biological, socio-economic and institutional complexities suggest that resistance breakdown should be viewed as a wicked problem, with often conflicting imperatives among stakeholders and no simple cause or solution. Promoting the uptake of scientific research outcomes that address complex issues in sustainable crop disease management will require a mix of education, incentives, legislation and social change.This article is part of the theme issue 'Infectious disease ecology and evolution in a changing world'.

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