QDETECT

Developing quarantine pest detection methods for use by national plant protection organizations (NPPO) and inspection services.

Unibo Team Leader: Prof. Guglielmo Costa, Dip. di Colture Arboree

Detection methods are the first tools used by national plant protection organizations (NPPO) and inspection services in order to find incursions of quarantine plant pathogens or pests (Q-pests) across a border, a crucial step to implement Council Directive 2000/29/EC. This is often done visually in the first instance, with support from a laboratory for confirmatory testing and subsequent monitoring. Reliance on laboratory testing causes significant delays when action is only taken on the return of results from the laboratory to which the samples were sent. Thus, there is a real need for rapid, simple and robust detection methods that can be deployed by NPPOs in the field with inspection services to enable early detection of Q-pests. The Q-detect consortium aims to develop detection methods based on biochemical (detecting volatile organic compounds [VOC] and nucleic acid), acoustic (including resonance), remote imaging
(incorporating spectral and automated data analysis) and pest trapping (insect pests and pathogen vectors) techniques.
The careful selection of traded products (primarily potato and forestry/trees) ensures the methods will be developed on high priority targets for the EU such as the pine wood nematode (Bursaphelenchus xylophilus), potato brown rot (Ralstonia solanacearum) and potato ring rot (Clavibacter michiganensis ssp. Sepedonicus), Asian longhorn beetle
(Anoplophora glabripennis) and a range of whitefly transmitted viruses. The diversity of targets enables the Q-detect consortium to work on suites of complementary techniques; this is of particular importance since the diverse range of targets listed in Directive 2000/29/EC means no single detection method will be suitable for all Q-pests. Critically, NPPOs and third country institutes are partners, which will enable testing, and validation of methods at real outbreak sites where these are absent in the EU. SME partners ensure access to technology and routes for exploitation after the project ends.

Coordinator
THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR ENVIRONMENT, FOOD AND RURAL AFFAIRS (UK)


Other participants
ALMA MATER STUDIORUM-UNIVERSITA DI BOLOGNA

  • Dip. di Colture Arboree
  • Resp. Scientifico: Prof. Guglielmo Costa

STICHTING DIENST LANDBOUWKUNDIG ONDERZOEK (The Netherlands)
NACIONALNI INSTITUT ZA BIOLOGIJO (Slovenia)
EIDGENOESSISCHES VOLKSWIRTSCHAFTSDEPARTEMENT (Switzerland)
SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY FACILITIES COUNCIL (UK)
STICHTING KATHOLIEKE UNIVERSITEIT (The Netherlands)
BUNDESFORSCHUNGS-UND AUSBILDUNGSZENTRUM FUER WALD, NATURGEFAHREN UND LANDSCHAFT (Austria)
UNIVERSITA DEGLI STUDI DI PADOVA (Italy)
CENTRO INTERNACIONAL DE LA PAPA (Peru)
CHINESE ACADEMY OF INSPECTION AND QUARANTINE (China)
Q-LINEA AB (Sweden)
SENSOR SENSE B.V. (The Netherlands)
OPTISENSE LIMITED (UK)

 

Start date 01/03/2010

End date 28/02/2013

Duration 36 months

Project cost 3.988.899 EURO

Project Funding 2.995.918 EURO

Subprogramme Area Development of detection methods for quarantine plant pests for use by Plant Health Inspection Services

Contract type Collaborative project-Small or medium scale focused research project