Kumarse Nazari
International Center for Agricultural Research in the Dry Areas
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Publication
Featured researches published by Kumarse Nazari.
Euphytica | 2011
Robert F. Park; T. Fetch; Dave Hodson; Yue Jin; Kumarse Nazari; Mohinder Prashar; Z. A. Pretorius
Surveillance of wheat rust pathogens, including assessments of rust incidence and virulence characterization via either trap plots or race (pathotype) surveys, has provided information fundamental in formulating and adopting appropriate national and international policies, investments and strategies in plant protection, plant breeding, seed systems, and in rust pathogen research. Despite many successes from national and regional co-ordination of rust surveillance, few attempts were made to extend rust surveillance to international or even global levels. The Global Cereal Rust Monitoring System was established to address this deficiency. It is underpinned by an information platform that includes standardized protocols for methods and systems used in surveys, preliminary virulence testing, data, sample transmission and management at the field and national and global levels, and includes two web-based visualization tools. While considerable progress has been made towards a global system for monitoring variability in the wheat stem rust pathogen, and linking this to the threat posed by this pathogen to regional wheat production, some challenges remain, including ongoing commitment to support rust surveillance, and the ability to share and compare surveillance data.
Ecology and Evolution | 2016
Stephanie Walter; Sajid Ali; Eric Kemen; Kumarse Nazari; Bochra A. Bahri; Jérôme Enjalbert; Jens Georg Hansen; J. K. M. Brown; Thomas Sicheritz-Pontén; Jonathan D. G. Jones; Claude de Vallavieille-Pope; Mogens S. Hovmøller; Annemarie Fejer Justesen
Abstract Investigating the origin and dispersal pathways is instrumental to mitigate threats and economic and environmental consequences of invasive crop pathogens. In the case of Puccinia striiformis causing yellow rust on wheat, a number of economically important invasions have been reported, e.g., the spreading of two aggressive and high temperature adapted strains to three continents since 2000. The combination of sequence‐characterized amplified region (SCAR) markers, which were developed from two specific AFLP fragments, differentiated the two invasive strains, PstS1 and PstS2 from all other P. striiformis strains investigated at a worldwide level. The application of the SCAR markers on 566 isolates showed that PstS1 was present in East Africa in the early 1980s and then detected in the Americas in 2000 and in Australia in 2002. PstS2 which evolved from PstS1 became widespread in the Middle East and Central Asia. In 2000, PstS2 was detected in Europe, where it never became prevalent. Additional SSR genotyping and virulence phenotyping revealed 10 and six variants, respectively, within PstS1 and PstS2, demonstrating the evolutionary potential of the pathogen. Overall, the results suggested East Africa as the most plausible origin of the two invasive strains. The SCAR markers developed in the present study provide a rapid, inexpensive, and efficient tool to track the distribution of P. striiformis invasive strains, PstS1 and PstS2.
Frontiers in Plant Science | 2017
Sajid Ali; Julian Rodriguez-Algaba; Tine Thach; Chris K. Sørensen; Jens Georg Hansen; Poul Lassen; Kumarse Nazari; David Hodson; Annemarie Fejer Justesen; Mogens S. Hovmøller
We investigated whether the recent worldwide epidemics of wheat yellow rust were driven by races of few clonal lineage(s) or populations of divergent races. Race phenotyping of 887 genetically diverse Puccinia striiformis isolates sampled in 35 countries during 2009–2015 revealed that these epidemics were often driven by races from few but highly divergent genetic lineages. PstS1 was predominant in North America; PstS2 in West Asia and North Africa; and both PstS1 and PstS2 in East Africa. PstS4 was prevalent in Northern Europe on triticale; PstS5 and PstS9 were prevalent in Central Asia; whereas PstS6 was prevalent in epidemics in East Africa. PstS7, PstS8 and PstS10 represented three genetic lineages prevalent in Europe. Races from other lineages were in low frequencies. Virulence to Yr9 and Yr27 was common in epidemics in Africa and Asia, while virulence to Yr17 and Yr32 were prevalent in Europe, corresponding to widely deployed resistance genes. The highest diversity was observed in South Asian populations, where frequent recombination has been reported, and no particular race was predominant in this area. The results are discussed in light of the role of invasions in shaping pathogen population across geographical regions. The results emphasized the lack of predictability of emergence of new races with high epidemic potential, which stresses the need for additional investments in population biology and surveillance activities of pathogens on global food crops, and assessments of disease vulnerability of host varieties prior to their deployment at larger scales.
Plant Disease | 2009
Kumarse Nazari; M. Mafi; A. Yahyaoui; Ravi P. Singh; Robert F. Park
Theoretical and Applied Genetics | 2015
Abdulqader Jighly; Benedict C. Oyiga; Farid Makdis; Kumarse Nazari; Omran Youssef; Wuletaw Tadesse; Osman Abdalla; Francis C. Ogbonnaya
Euphytica | 2011
Z. M. Ziyaev; Ram C. Sharma; Kumarse Nazari; Alexey Morgounov; A. A. Amanov; Z. F. Ziyadullaev; Z. Khalikulov; S. M. Alikulov
Crop Science | 2014
Wuletaw Tadesse; Francis C. Ogbonnaya; Abdulqader Jighly; Kumarse Nazari; S. Rajaram; Michael Baum
Theoretical and Applied Genetics | 2014
Robert F. Park; V. Mohler; Kumarse Nazari; D. Singh
Crop Science | 2012
Dag Terje Filip Endresen; Kenneth Street; Michael Mackay; Abdallah Bari; Ahmed Amri; Eddy De Pauw; Kumarse Nazari; Amor Yahyaoui
Archive | 2012
Robert F. Park; Y Alemayehu; J Arista; T. Fetch; J Grønbech-Hansen; Dave Hodson; Yue Jin; Petr Kosina; Poul Lassen; P Moncada; Kumarse Nazari; Z. A. Pretorius; Kai Sonder; Les J. Szabo
Collaboration
Dive into the Kumarse Nazari's collaboration.
International Center for Agricultural Research in the Dry Areas
View shared research outputsInternational Center for Agricultural Research in the Dry Areas
View shared research outputsInternational Center for Agricultural Research in the Dry Areas
View shared research outputsInternational Center for Agricultural Research in the Dry Areas
View shared research outputs