Research Keyword: coffee production

Identification and potential of the hyperparasite Acremonium persicinum as biocontrol agent against coffee leaf rust

Coffee leaf rust is a major disease that destroys coffee crops and costs the global coffee industry billions of dollars annually. Researchers in China discovered that a fungus called Acremonium persicinum naturally parasitizes the rust-causing fungus and can prevent coffee leaves from being infected. When this beneficial fungus was applied to infected coffee leaves, it completely stopped the rust fungus from growing and spreading. This discovery offers farmers an environmentally friendly alternative to chemical pesticides for protecting their coffee crops.

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Gene transfer between fungal species triggers repeated coffee wilt disease outbreaks

A new study found that coffee wilt disease, which has caused major crop losses in Africa, has repeatedly emerged due to genes jumping between different fungal species. These genes travel via special mobile DNA elements called Starships, which act like genetic vehicles carrying pathogenic genes from one fungus to another. When Fusarium fungi exchanged genes this way, they became better at infecting different varieties of coffee plants. Understanding how these genes move is crucial for protecting coffee crops from future disease outbreaks.

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