ABERTAY
RESEARCHERS IN CLOVER TO UNEARTH DESTRUCTIVE BUG
9 April 2002
Scots scientists are playing a key role in a major new research
effort which could save Britain's farmers millions of pounds a year
through reductions in fertiliser and pesticide use.
Biotechnology experts at the University of Abertay Dundee,
in partnership with two organisations in England, have been awarded
£471,000 by the BBSRC (Biotechnology and Biological
Sciences Research Council) for a three-year study into the relationship
between white clover and a tiny insect.
White clover is highly valued throughout the country both for its
feeding value for livestock and for its ability to 'fix' nitrogen
in the soil - a vital nutrient for other plants.
Some 75% of grassland seed mixtures sown in the UK include
white clover, yet studies have shown that it only thrives in around
20% of fields managed as pasture for cattle and sheep. Experts believe
that the main culprit is a tiny weevil, less than one millimetre
long, which eats the roots of the plant including the all-important
nitrogen-fixing nodules.
High levels of expensive fertiliser are needed to ensure that white
clover grows properly and contributes to the productivity of the
pasture and the livestock which feeds upon it.
Now, Abertay biotechnologists
are working with colleagues at Reading University and the
Institute of Grassland and Environmental Research (IGER), to
find out exactly what is going on just beneath the surface of our
fields.
Researchers at Reading will be using advanced CAT scanners (computerised
axial tomography) to see inside the soil without physically affecting
it - the same non-invasive technology used widely in medicine for
diagnosing conditions inside the body.
Experts at Abertay will then apply the latest computerised statistical
techniques to produce a theoretical model of what happens
inside the soil and what factors are influencing change. This can
then be used to predict the outcome of changing any one of those
factors through management of the field. It is hoped that the study
will produce a new management model which could reduce the amount
of fertiliser applied to UK grassland and comply with new, more
stringent, environmental legislation in the future.
Professor John Crawford, director of SIMBIOS - the
joint centre for mathematical biology established at the Universities
of Abertay Dundee and Dundee - explained: "We know that this
weevil, from the Sitona genus, preys on the root systems of the
plant, but we don't know how it moves around in the soil to find
the roots. When you are less than a millimetre long, finding a food
source several centimetres away could be difficult, but Sitona seems
to manage."
"We
need to find out how the weevils and their larvae do this, and what
environmental factors influence their success. Then we can draw
up guidelines of management practice which will help farmers reduce
the impact of the weevil without using expensive and environmentally-unfriendly
chemicals."
Useful Information:
Government figures show that Scotland's farmers spent more than
£110 million on fertilisers and £50 million on pesticides
last year. In the UK as a whole, the equivalent figures were £820
million and £543 million.
SIMBIOS is the Scottish Informatics,
Mathematics, Biology and Statistics Centre. Established in 1999,
in partnership with Dundee University, SIMBIOS houses 20 research
scientists at its Abertay site, working on new ways of studying
how complex biological systems operate by bringing together expertise
in advanced mathematics, statistics, informatics and the biosciences.
|