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Dive into the research topics where Jay Ram Lamichhane is active.

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Featured researches published by Jay Ram Lamichhane.


Agronomy for Sustainable Development | 2015

Eight principles of integrated pest management

Marco Barzman; P. Barberi; A. Nicholas E. Birch; Piet Boonekamp; Silke Dachbrodt-Saaydeh; Benno Graf; Bernd Hommel; Jens Erik Jensen; Jozsef Kiss; Per Kudsk; Jay Ram Lamichhane; Antoine Messéan; A.C. Moonen; Alain Ratnadass; Pierre Ricci; Jean Louis Sarah; Maurizio Sattin

The use of pesticides made it possible to increase yields, simplify cropping systems, and forego more complicated crop protection strategies. Over-reliance on chemical control, however, is associated with contamination of ecosystems and undesirable health effects. The future of crop production is now also threatened by emergence of pest resistance and declining availability of active substances. There is therefore a need to design cropping systems less dependent on synthetic pesticides. Consequently, the European Union requires the application of eight principles (P) of Integrated Pest Management that fit within sustainable farm management. Here, we propose to farmers, advisors, and researchers a dynamic and flexible approach that accounts for the diversity of farming situations and the complexities of agroecosystems and that can improve the resilience of cropping systems and our capacity to adapt crop protection to local realities. For each principle (P), we suggest that (P1) the design of inherently robust cropping systems using a combination of agronomic levers is key to prevention. (P2) Local availability of monitoring, warning, and forecasting systems is a reality to contend with. (P3) The decision-making process can integrate cropping system factors to develop longer-term strategies. (P4) The combination of non-chemical methods that may be individually less efficient than pesticides can generate valuable synergies. (P5) Development of new biological agents and products and the use of existing databases offer options for the selection of products minimizing impact on health, the environment, and biological regulation of pests. (P6) Reduced pesticide use can be effectively combined with other tactics. (P7) Addressing the root causes of pesticide resistance is the best way to find sustainable crop protection solutions. And (P8) integration of multi-season effects and trade-offs in evaluation criteria will help develop sustainable solutions.


Plant Disease | 2016

Toward a Reduced Reliance on Conventional Pesticides in European Agriculture

Jay Ram Lamichhane; Silke Dachbrodt-Saaydeh; Per Kudsk; Antoine Messéan

Whether modern agriculture without conventional pesticides will be possible or not is a matter of debate. The debate is meaningful within the context of rising health and environmental awareness on one hand, and the global challenge of feeding a steadily growing human population on the other. Conventional pesticide use has come under pressure in many countries, and some European Union (EU) Member States have adopted policies for risk reduction following Directive 2009/128/EC, the sustainable use of pesticides. Highly diverse crop production systems across Europe, having varied geographic and climatic conditions, increase the complexity of European crop protection. The economic competitiveness of European agriculture is challenged by the current legislation, which banned the use of many previously authorized pesticides that are still available and applied in other parts of the world. This challenge could place EU agricultural production at a disadvantage, so EU farmers are seeking help from the research community to foster and support integrated pest management (IPM). Ensuring stable crop yields and quality while reducing the reliance on pesticides is a challenge facing the farming community is today. Considering this, we focus on several diverse situations in European agriculture in general and in European crop protection in particular. We emphasize that the marked biophysical and socio-economic differences across Europe have led to a situation where a meaningful reduction in pesticide use can hardly be achieved. Nevertheless, improvements and/or adoption of the knowledge and technologies of IPM can still achieve large gains in pesticide reduction. In this overview, the current pest problems and their integrated management are discussed in the context of specific geographic regions of Europe, with a particular emphasis on reduced pesticide use. We conclude that there are opportunities for reduction in many parts of Europe without significant losses in crop yields.


Molecular Plant Pathology | 2015

A framework to gauge the epidemic potential of plant pathogens in environmental reservoirs: the example of kiwifruit canker

Claudia Bartoli; Jay Ram Lamichhane; Odile Berge; Caroline Guilbaud; Leonardo Varvaro; Giorgio Mariano Balestra; Boris A. Vinatzer; Cindy E. Morris

New economically important diseases on crops and forest trees emerge recurrently. An understanding of where new pathogenic lines come from and how they evolve is fundamental for the deployment of accurate surveillance methods. We used kiwifruit bacterial canker as a model to assess the importance of potential reservoirs of new pathogenic lineages. The current kiwifruit canker epidemic is at least the fourth outbreak of the disease on kiwifruit caused by Pseudomonas syringae in the mere 50 years in which this crop has been cultivated worldwide, with each outbreak being caused by different genetic lines of the bacterium. Here, we ask whether strains in natural (non-agricultural) environments could cause future epidemics of canker on kiwifruit. To answer this question, we evaluated the pathogenicity, endophytic colonization capacity and competitiveness on kiwifruit of P. syringae strains genetically similar to epidemic strains and originally isolated from aquatic and subalpine habitats. All environmental strains possessing an operon involved in the degradation of aromatic compounds via the catechol pathway grew endophytically and caused symptoms in kiwifruit vascular tissue. Environmental and epidemic strains showed a wide host range, revealing their potential as future pathogens of a variety of hosts. Environmental strains co-existed endophytically with CFBP 7286, an epidemic strain, and shared about 20 virulence genes, but were missing six virulence genes found in all epidemic strains. By identifying the specific gene content in genetic backgrounds similar to known epidemic strains, we developed criteria to assess the epidemic potential and to survey for such strains as a means of forecasting and managing disease emergence.


Advances in Agronomy | 2014

Disease and Frost Damage of Woody Plants Caused by Pseudomonas syringae: Seeing the Forest for the Trees

Jay Ram Lamichhane; Leonardo Varvaro; Luciana Parisi; Jean-Marc Audergon; Cindy E. Morris

Abstract Pseudomonas syringae is a phytopathogenic bacterium that causes diseases of monocots, herbaceous dicots, and woody dicots, worldwide. On woody plants, reports of disease due to P. syringae have markedly increased in the last years and the diseases have been recognized as a major threat to the primary products of agroforestry practices. Detection in Italy of a new highly aggressive population of P. syringae in 2008 on kiwifruit, which caused severe epidemics in the following years throughout the kiwifruit-growing areas of Asia, Europe, Oceania, and South America, rendered the entire kiwifruit industry vulnerable to the disease. Similarly, occurrence of an aggressive population of P. syringae on horse chestnut in 2002 in the Netherlands has rapidly established itself as a major threat to horse chestnut throughout Northwest Europe. To better understand the origin of such disease epidemics, a thorough knowledge of the pathogen is needed in sensu lato . Here, we report the most important features of the pathogen and its hosts in an attempt to clarify some key aspects. In particular, the diseases and the economic losses they cause, disease epidemiology, pathogen diversity, and the possible means of disease control have been discussed throughout the manuscript. In addition to the ability to cause the disease, the damage caused to woody plants through the ice nucleation activity of this bacterium is discussed.


Agronomy for Sustainable Development | 2015

Robust cropping systems to tackle pests under climate change. A review

Jay Ram Lamichhane; Marco Barzman; Kees Booij; Piet Boonekamp; Nicolas Desneux; Laurent Huber; Per Kudsk; Stephen R. H. Langrell; Alain Ratnadass; Pierre Ricci; Jean-Louis Sarah; Antoine Messéan

Agriculture in the twenty-first century faces the challenge of meeting food demands while satisfying sustainability goals. The challenge is further complicated by climate change which affects the distribution of crop pests (intended as insects, plants, and pathogenic agents injurious to crops) and the severity of their outbreaks. Increasing concerns over health and the environment as well as new legislation on pesticide use, particularly in the European Union, urge us to find sustainable alternatives to pesticide-based pest management. Here, we review the effect of climate change on crop protection and propose strategies to reduce the impact of future invasive as well as rapidly evolving resident populations. The major points are the following: (1) the main consequence of climate change and globalization is a heightened level of unpredictability of spatial and temporal interactions between weather, cropping systems, and pests; (2) the unpredictable adaptation of pests to a changing environment primarily creates uncertainty and projected changes do not automatically translate into doom and gloom scenarios; (3) faced with uncertainty, policy, research, and extension should prepare for worst-case scenarios following a “no regrets” approach that promotes resilience vis-à-vis pests which, at the biophysical level, entails uncovering what currently makes cropping systems resilient, while at the organizational level, the capacity to adapt needs to be recognized and strengthened; (4) more collective approaches involving extension and other stakeholders will help meet the challenge of developing more robust cropping systems; (5) farmers can take advantage of Web 2.0 and other new technologies to make the exchange of updated information quicker and easier; (6) cooperation between historically compartmentalized experts in plant health and crop protection could help develop anticipation strategies; and (7) the current decline in skilled crop protection specialists in Europe should be reversed, and shortcomings in local human and financial resources can be overcome by pooling resources across borders.


Pest Management Science | 2017

Identifying obstacles and ranking common biological control research priorities for Europe to manage most economically important pests in arable, vegetable and perennial crops.

Jay Ram Lamichhane; Monika Bischoff-Schaefer; Sylvia Bluemel; Silke Dachbrodt-Saaydeh; Laure Dreux; Jean Pierre Jansen; Jozsef Kiss; J. Köhl; Per Kudsk; Thibaut Malausa; Antoine Messéan; Philippe C. Nicot; Pierre Ricci; Jérôme Thibierge; François Villeneuve

EU agriculture is currently in transition from conventional crop protection to integrated pest management (IPM). Because biocontrol is a key component of IPM, many European countries recently have intensified their national efforts on biocontrol research and innovation (R&I), although such initiatives are often fragmented. The operational outputs of national efforts would benefit from closer collaboration among stakeholders via transnationally coordinated approaches, as most economically important pests are similar across Europe. This paper proposes a common European framework on biocontrol R&I. It identifies generic R&I bottlenecks and needs as well as priorities for three crop types (arable, vegetable and perennial crops). The existing gap between the market offers of biocontrol solutions and the demand of growers, the lengthy and expensive registration process for biocontrol solutions and their varying effectiveness due to variable climatic conditions and site-specific factors across Europe are key obstacles hindering the development and adoption of biocontrol solutions in Europe. Considering arable, vegetable and perennial crops, a dozen common target pests are identified for each type of crop and ranked by order of importance at European level. Such a ranked list indicates numerous topics on which future joint transnational efforts would be justified.


Plant Pathology | 2017

Monitoring the occurrence of tomato bacterial spot and range of the causal agent Xanthomonas perforans in Iran

Ebrahim Osdaghi; Seyed Mohsen Taghavi; Habiballah Hamzehzarghani; Amal Fazliarab; Jay Ram Lamichhane

A two-year comprehensive field survey was conducted across major tomato growing areas of Iran. Two hundred and thirty-four tomato fields and six tomato-producing greenhouses were surveyed for the potential presence of bacterial spot disease. Five hundred ninety-six symptomatic and asymptomatic tomato samples were analyzed. While Xanthomonas sp. were found in association with both symptomatic and asymptomatic tomato plants from five surveyed counties, the bacterial spot disease was observed only from three of them. Only strains isolated from symptomatic plants induced disease symptoms on tomato while those isolated from asymptomatic plants caused symptoms only on cabbage and common bean. None of the strains caused disease symptoms on pepper and eggplant. Phylogenetic analyses showed that X. perforans is the causal agent of tomato bacterial spot in Iran although X. campestris and X. axonopodis were also associated with asymptomatic tomato plants. All X. perforans strains isolated in this study were sensitive to streptomycin, copper sulfate and copper oxychloride at concentrations of 50 mg/l, 200 mg/l of, and 0.8 g/l, respectively. Unlike type strain of X. perforans, strains isolated in this study did not produce bacteriocin against other Xanthomnas spp. nor were they detected using the usual species-specific primer pair Bs-XpF/Bs-XpR. This suggests an atypical nature of X. perforans strains in Iran, which leads to hypothesize that X. perforans strains isolated in Iran may have a separate origin than those causing disease epidemics elsewhere. Aggregated dispersal pattern of the diseased tomato fields signifies the seed-borne introduction of the pathogen into the country. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.


Agronomy for Sustainable Development | 2017

Integrated management of damping-off diseases. A review

Jay Ram Lamichhane; Carolyne Dürr; André A. Schwanck; Marie-Hélène Robin; Jean-Pierre Sarthou; Vincent Cellier; Antoine Messéan; Jean-Noël Aubertot

Damping-off is a disease that leads to the decay of germinating seeds and young seedlings, which represents for farmers one of the most important yield constraints both in nurseries and fields. As for other biotic stresses, conventional fungicides are widely used to manage this disease, with two major consequences. On the one hand, fungicide overuse threatens the human health and causes ecological concerns. On the other hand, this practice has led to the emergence of pesticide-resistant microorganisms in the environment. Thus, there are increasing concerns to develop sustainable and durable damping-off management strategies that are less reliant on conventional pesticides. Achieving such a goal requires a better knowledge of pathogen biology and disease epidemiology in order to facilitate the decision-making process. It also demands using all available non-chemical tools that can be adapted to regional and specific production situations. However, this still is not the case and major knowledge gaps must be filled. Here, we review up to 300 articles of the damping-off literature in order to highlight major knowledge gaps and identify future research priorities. The major findings are (i) damping-off is an emerging disease worldwide, which affects all agricultural and forestry crops, both in nurseries and fields; (ii) over a dozen of soil-borne fungi and fungus-like organisms are a cause of damping-off but only a few of them are frequently associated with the disease; (iii) damping-off may affect from 5 to 80% of the seedlings, thereby inducing heavy economic consequences for farmers; (iv) a lot of research efforts have been made in recent years to develop biocontrol solutions for damping-off and there are interesting future perspectives; and (v) damping-off management requires an integrated pest management (IPM) approach combining both preventive and curative tactics and strategies. Given the complex nature of damping-off and the numerous factors involved in its occurrence, we recommend further research on critical niches of complexity, such as seeds, seedbed, associated microbes and their interfaces, using novel and robust experimental and modeling approaches based on five research priorities described in this paper.


Molecular Plant Pathology | 2015

Mutability in Pseudomonas viridiflava as a programmed balance between antibiotic resistance and pathogenicity

Claudia Bartoli; Jay Ram Lamichhane; Odile Berge; Leonardo Varvaro; Cindy E. Morris

Mutable bacterial cells are defective in their DNA repair system and often have a phenotype different from that of their wild-type counterparts. In human bacterial pathogens, the mutable and hypermutable phenotypes are often associated with general antibiotic resistance. Here, we quantified the occurrence of mutable cells in Pseudomonas viridiflava, a phytopathogenic bacterium in the P. syringae complex with a broad host range and capacity to live as a saprophyte. Two phenotypic variants (transparent and mucoid) were produced by this bacterium. The transparent variant had a mutator phenotype, showed general antibiotic resistance and could not induce disease on the plant species tested (bean). In contrast, the mucoid variant did not display mutability or resistance to antibiotics and was capable of inducing disease on bean. Both the transparent and mucoid variants were less fit when grown in vitro, whereas, in planta, both of the variants and wild-types attained similar population densities. Given the importance of the methyl-directed mismatch repair system (MMR) in the occurrence of mutable and hypermutable cells in human bacterial pathogens, we investigated whether mutations in mut genes were associated with mutator transparent cells in P. viridiflava. Our results showed no mutations in MMR genes in any of the P. viridiflava cells tested. Here, we report that a high mutation rate and antibiotic resistance are inversely correlated with pathogenicity in P. viridiflava, but are not associated with mutations in MMR. In addition, P. viridiflava variants differ from variants produced by other phytopathogenic bacteria in the absence of reversion to the wild-type phenotype.


Molecular Plant Pathology | 2016

Molecular mechanisms underlying the emergence of bacterial pathogens: an ecological perspective.

Claudia Bartoli; Fabrice Roux; Jay Ram Lamichhane

The rapid emergence of new bacterial diseases negatively affects both human health and agricultural productivity. Although the molecular mechanisms underlying these disease emergences are shared between human- and plant-pathogenic bacteria, not much effort has been made to date to understand disease emergences caused by plant-pathogenic bacteria. In particular, there is a paucity of information in the literature on the role of environmental habitats in which plant-pathogenic bacteria evolve and on the stress factors to which these microbes are unceasingly exposed. In this microreview, we focus on three molecular mechanisms underlying pathogenicity in bacteria, namely mutations, genomic rearrangements and the acquisition of new DNA sequences through horizontal gene transfer (HGT). We briefly discuss the role of these mechanisms in bacterial disease emergence and elucidate how the environment can influence the occurrence and regulation of these molecular mechanisms by directly impacting disease emergence. The understanding of such molecular evolutionary mechanisms and their environmental drivers will represent an important step towards predicting bacterial disease emergence and developing sustainable management strategies for crops.

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Antoine Messéan

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Piet Boonekamp

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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Cindy E. Morris

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Jean-Noël Aubertot

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Jozsef Kiss

Szent István University

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A.C. Moonen

Sant'Anna School of Advanced Studies

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Marco Barzman

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Philippe Debaeke

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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