DROPSA

Strategies to develop effective, innovative and practical approaches to protect major European fruit crops from pests and pathogens

The DROPSA consortium will create new knowledge and understanding of the damage and losses of fruit crops resulting from pests and pathogens, with a specific focus on the new and emerging threats due to Drosophila

suzukii and quarantine pathogens Pseudomonas syringae, Xanthomonas fragariae and X. arboricola. The project will deliver a cost effective approach that can be widely implemented by the EU fruit industry. The aims and objectives are to:

  • Determine the pathways of introduction and spread of D. suzukii and pathogens into the EU and develop preventative strategies and recommendations against the introduction of other dangerous fruit pests and pathogens.
  • Determine the biology, ecology and interaction of these pests and diseases in different regions of Europe. This will involve a comprehensive evaluation of the life cycles, host ranges, capacities to disperse, the identification of natural enemies, plant-pathogen interactions as well as the semiochemicals involved in the behaviour of D. suzukii. The biology will provide the platform to develop practical solutions for sustainable pest control.
  • Develop innovative and effective control options using approved chemicals, semiochemicals, novel antimicrobial compounds and biological control agents as well as cultural practices, sterile insect techniques and new mode of action compounds. The most reliable and effective control options will be combined to optimise an integrated pest management (IPM) strategy.
  • Develop forecasting and decision support systems and risk mapping as a component of IPM. The economic viability of proposed strategies for fruit crop protection will be evaluated and used to support decision making in the implementation of IPM strategies to protect the EU fruit sector.
  • To protect intellectual property (IP) and to undertake dissemination and exploitation actions to maximise the impact and up take of the recommended IPM by commercial fruit growers.
     

Start date 01/01/2014
End date 28/02/2018
Duration 50 months
Project Reference 613678
Project cost 8.526.899 EURO
Project Funding 5.997.965 EURO
Area FP7-COOPERATION-KBBE
Subprogramme Area KBBE.2013.1.2-04: Control of pests and pathogens affecting fruit crops
Contract type Collaborative project targeted to a special group (such as SMEs)
Coordinator The Secretary Of State For Environment, Food And Rural Affairs (UK)

Other participants

  • ALMA MATER STUDIORUM-UNIVERSITA DI BOLOGNA
         - Dip. di Scienze Agrarie-DIPSA
         - Resp. Scientifico: Dr. Francesco Spinelli 
  • Consiglio Per La Ricerca E La Sperimentazione In Agricoltura (Italy)
  • Institut National De La Recherche Agronomique-INRA (France)
  • Imperial College Of Science, Technology And Medicine (UK) 
  • Universita Degli Studi Di Padova (Italy)
  • Instytut Ogrodnictwa (Poland)
  • Stichting Dienst Landbouwkundig Onderzoek (Netherlands)
  • Oxitec Limited (UK)
  • United States Department Of Agriculture (USA)
  • Julius Kuhn-Institut Bundesforschungsinstitut Fur Kulturpflanzen (Germany)
  • Universitat De Girona (Spain)
  • Zuercher Hochschule Fuer Angewandte Wissenschaften (Switzerland)
  • The New Zealand Institute For Plant And Food Research Limited (New Zealand)
  • Ecologia Y Proteccion Agricola Sl (Spain)
  • Pherobank Bv (Netherlands)
  • Kokuritsu Daigaku Hojin Hokkaido Daigaku (Japan)
  • University Of Leeds (UK)
  • Universitat Politecnica De Valencia (Spain)
  • Yunnan Agricultural University (China)
  • Endoterapia Vegetal Sl (Spain)
  • European And Mediterranean Plant Protection Organisation (France)
  • Agriculture And Agri-Food Canada (Canada)
  • Agrifutur Srl (Italy)
  • Cab International (UK)
  • Handelsonderneming Vlamings Bv (Netherlands)