home news forum careers events suppliers solutions markets expos directories catalogs resources advertise contacts
 
News Page

The news
and
beyond the news
Index of news sources
All Africa Asia/Pacific Europe Latin America Middle East North America
  Topics
  Species
Archives
News archive 1997-2008
 

United Kingdom - Major winter wheat yellow rust resistance gene fails - A major disease resistance gene has been unpicked by the pathogen that causes yellow rust in winter wheat


United Kingdom
May 30, 2025

It follows reports of unusual levels of the foliar disease in many winter wheat varieties during spring, both in Recommended Lists (RL) variety trials and commercial crops.

We first rang the alarm bells in early April and advised farmers not to rely on the current yellow rust disease resistance information published in the RL.

This early warning helped farmers adapt fungicide spray programmes, with the dry spring facilitating timely treatment.

Unusual activity was first seen in late March in an RL fungicide-untreated trial near Sunderland. At this site, several varieties had yellow rust symptoms, despite being classified as resistant to the disease at the young plant stage on the RL (2025/26).

Paul Gosling, who manages the RL at AHDB, said:

“Following discussions with plant breeders, we suspected that an important yellow rust resistance gene – Yr15 – had potentially been overcome.

“We subsequently observed similar resistance-breakdown patterns more widely in RL trials, starting in southern Scotland before spreading down the eastern coast of England, down as far as East Anglia.”

Trial operators sent diseased leaf samples from the affected RL trial sites near Sunderland and Berwick-upon-Tweed for analysis by the AHDB-funded UK Cereal Pathogen Virulence Survey (UKCPVS).

The NIAB-led service confirmed that Yr15 had failed.

Pathogen isolates from these samples not only infected a test variety known to carry the Yr15 resistance gene but went on to sporulate profusely.

NIAB-funded work also confirmed the presence of the Yr15 gene, using molecular markers, in several of the varieties impacted at the young-plant stage.

The initial tests prioritised testing of varieties with a strong level of adult plant stage resistance (disease rating 8 or 9), according to RL 2025/26.

For example, this found that the Hard Group 4 varieties KWS Dawsum, LG Typhoon and Champion carry the Yr15 gene.

NIAB is currently testing a wider range of varieties, with further genetic screening also being done by the John Innes Centre in Norwich and the Global Rust Reference Centre in Denmark.

The Yr15 resistance gene, which was discovered in the 1980s, confers broad-spectrum resistance against genetically diverse yellow rust isolates (from a large worldwide collection of more than 3,000) and was an important line of defence.

Paul added:

“Adult plant resistance has clearly taken a knock, but the full impact will depend on a myriad of other resistance genes, which vary from variety to variety. Some varieties appear to be fighting back, whereas others are recording unusually high disease levels. Although we have not seen the unusual symptoms towards the south or the west, it appears to be spreading fast. No doubt it will impact on variety choice and disease management across the UK next season.”

RL disease ratings are usually calculated from data sets of between three and five years. As there is evidence of a major change to the pathogen population, the data set will be limited to a single year (harvest 2025) for the disease rating calculations in the next RL edition (2026/27).

We are currently processing yellow rust data from its UK network of variety trials and will issue revised disease resistance information as soon as possible on the RL web page.

 



More news from: AHDB - Agriculture and Horticulture Development Board


Website: http://cereals.ahdb.org.uk/

Published: May 30, 2025

The news item on this page is copyright by the organization where it originated
Fair use notice

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

  Archive of the news section


Copyright @ 1992-2025 SeedQuest - All rights reserved