New Zealand's land-based primary industries need to get ready for more and more serious crop disease as climate change causes more and longer droughts, according to new research.
In the journal Australasian Plant Pathology, the authors say that climate change is expected to bring more droughts in many parts of New Zealand, and more droughts are "likely to increase the severity of a wide range of diseases affecting the plant-based productive sectors".
Scientists from the Bio-Protection Research Centre, Scion, Lincoln University, AUT University, Landcare Research and the University of Auckland analysed the potential impact of climate-change-induced drought on several commercial plants and their diseases. They found that in most instances "increased drought is expected to increase disease expression".
The probable negative effects of drought include "a predisposition of hosts to infection through general weakening and/or suppressed disease resistance".
More frequent and more severe droughts could also lead to "emergence of enhanced or new diseases of plants that can reduce primary production".