The International Plant Diagnostic Network West Africa

Diseases do not respect national boundaries. The International Plant Diagnostic Network (IPDN) was initiated to improve the capacity for precise and rapid disease diagnostics across West Africa. A disease can only be controlled in an appropriate manner if the causal agent is known. Incorrect diagnos...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Beed, Fenton D., Sikirou, R., Bandyopadhyay, Ranajit, Twizeyimana, M., Miller, S.
Formato: Póster
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/92286
_version_ 1855531063294558208
author Beed, Fenton D.
Sikirou, R.
Bandyopadhyay, Ranajit
Twizeyimana, M.
Miller, S.
author_browse Bandyopadhyay, Ranajit
Beed, Fenton D.
Miller, S.
Sikirou, R.
Twizeyimana, M.
author_facet Beed, Fenton D.
Sikirou, R.
Bandyopadhyay, Ranajit
Twizeyimana, M.
Miller, S.
author_sort Beed, Fenton D.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Diseases do not respect national boundaries. The International Plant Diagnostic Network (IPDN) was initiated to improve the capacity for precise and rapid disease diagnostics across West Africa. A disease can only be controlled in an appropriate manner if the causal agent is known. Incorrect diagnosis of disease has led to significant losses in food production which impacts directly on the health and income of farmers. Furthermore, it has impacted on trade opportunities through the accumulation of residues of prohibited pesticides and mycotoxins and the presence of outlawed pathogens. West Africa’s IPDN was established with a hub lab at IITA Bènin with spoke labs in Ghana, Mali and Senegal with support provided by IITA Nigeria. The urgent need for a network such as the IPDN was demonstrated by results from a survey of stakeholders in the region. Furthermore, evidence of the increasing failing capacity of Africa to recognize and hence control current, new and emerging diseases is demonstrated by the fact the number of New Disease Reports (NDR) in Africa have rapidly decreased over the last 100 years while they have rapidly increased in Europe (Foresight 2006: Infectious Diseases: preparing for the future Action Plan). The West African IPDN has initiated a network of experts across the region which has increased awareness of how to diagnose, control and report crop diseases. The IPDN network is being enhanced through the introduction of an internet based communication tool called DDIS (Distance Diagnostic Information System) which will increase linkages to experts within and outside West Africa. DDIS is a tried and tested system that has successfully increased communication to support the National Plant Diagnostic Network in USA.
format Poster
id CGSpace92286
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2008
publishDateRange 2008
publishDateSort 2008
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace922862023-02-15T06:37:32Z The International Plant Diagnostic Network West Africa Beed, Fenton D. Sikirou, R. Bandyopadhyay, Ranajit Twizeyimana, M. Miller, S. diseases soybeans tomato Diseases do not respect national boundaries. The International Plant Diagnostic Network (IPDN) was initiated to improve the capacity for precise and rapid disease diagnostics across West Africa. A disease can only be controlled in an appropriate manner if the causal agent is known. Incorrect diagnosis of disease has led to significant losses in food production which impacts directly on the health and income of farmers. Furthermore, it has impacted on trade opportunities through the accumulation of residues of prohibited pesticides and mycotoxins and the presence of outlawed pathogens. West Africa’s IPDN was established with a hub lab at IITA Bènin with spoke labs in Ghana, Mali and Senegal with support provided by IITA Nigeria. The urgent need for a network such as the IPDN was demonstrated by results from a survey of stakeholders in the region. Furthermore, evidence of the increasing failing capacity of Africa to recognize and hence control current, new and emerging diseases is demonstrated by the fact the number of New Disease Reports (NDR) in Africa have rapidly decreased over the last 100 years while they have rapidly increased in Europe (Foresight 2006: Infectious Diseases: preparing for the future Action Plan). The West African IPDN has initiated a network of experts across the region which has increased awareness of how to diagnose, control and report crop diseases. The IPDN network is being enhanced through the introduction of an internet based communication tool called DDIS (Distance Diagnostic Information System) which will increase linkages to experts within and outside West Africa. DDIS is a tried and tested system that has successfully increased communication to support the National Plant Diagnostic Network in USA. 2008 2018-04-24T08:40:25Z 2018-04-24T08:40:25Z Poster https://hdl.handle.net/10568/92286 en Limited Access Beed, F., Sikirou, R., Bandyopadhyay, R., Twizeyimana, M. & Miller, S. (2008). The International Plant Diagnostic Network West Africa. Poster presented in USAID's annual meeting; Advancing Regional and Global IPM CRSP Programs, May 19-22, Manila Hotel, Philippines.
spellingShingle diseases
soybeans
tomato
Beed, Fenton D.
Sikirou, R.
Bandyopadhyay, Ranajit
Twizeyimana, M.
Miller, S.
The International Plant Diagnostic Network West Africa
title The International Plant Diagnostic Network West Africa
title_full The International Plant Diagnostic Network West Africa
title_fullStr The International Plant Diagnostic Network West Africa
title_full_unstemmed The International Plant Diagnostic Network West Africa
title_short The International Plant Diagnostic Network West Africa
title_sort international plant diagnostic network west africa
topic diseases
soybeans
tomato
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/92286
work_keys_str_mv AT beedfentond theinternationalplantdiagnosticnetworkwestafrica
AT sikirour theinternationalplantdiagnosticnetworkwestafrica
AT bandyopadhyayranajit theinternationalplantdiagnosticnetworkwestafrica
AT twizeyimanam theinternationalplantdiagnosticnetworkwestafrica
AT millers theinternationalplantdiagnosticnetworkwestafrica
AT beedfentond internationalplantdiagnosticnetworkwestafrica
AT sikirour internationalplantdiagnosticnetworkwestafrica
AT bandyopadhyayranajit internationalplantdiagnosticnetworkwestafrica
AT twizeyimanam internationalplantdiagnosticnetworkwestafrica
AT millers internationalplantdiagnosticnetworkwestafrica