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Book chapter - Peer-reviewed, 2015

Surveillance for soilborne microbial biocontrol agents and plant pathogens

Whittle, Peter; Sundh, Ingvar; Neate, Stephen

Abstract

Soilborne microbes are well known in agriculture as biological control agents and plant pathogens. Methods for their detection or diagnosis have been studied extensively over decades in order to identify the organisms, elucidate their biology, detect their presence and estimate their prevalence in environments, manipulate and control their populations, and answer questions about risk. Th e high importance of microbial biocontrol agents and soilborne plant pathogens in agriculture and the environment has given rise to needs to undertake surveillance on them. Th e appropriate design of surveillance (the deployment of detection methods in practice in order to create surveillance information) is driven by the questions that need to be answered, which depend on the context. Th is chapter will discuss the reasons for surveillance for these two groups of soilborne microbes and the methods used for their detection, to see whether there are opportunities, or needs, to improve the design of soilborne microbe surveillance.

Published in

Book title: Biosecurity surveillance: quantitative approaches
ISBN: 9781780643595
Publisher: CAB International

Authors' information

Whittle, Peter
Queensland University of Technology (QUT)
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Department of Microbiology
Neate, Stephen
Department of Agriculture and Fisheries

Associated SLU-program

SLU Network Plant Protection

UKÄ Subject classification

Microbiology

URI (permanent link to this page)

https://res.slu.se/id/publ/68820