June 21, 2007
Fredericksburg Facility Will Address Top Wine Industry Threat
Writer: Paul Schattenberg, 210-467-6575,paschattenberg@ag.tamu.edu
Contact: Dr. James Supak, 979-862-4389,j-supak@tamu.edu
Jim Kamas, 830-997-7047,jkamas@tamu.edu
FREDERICKSBURG – The newly opened Texas Pierce's Disease Research and
Extension Program facility in Fredericksburg may yield solutions for
mitigating the single-greatest threat to the Texas wine industry, experts
said.
The 3,200-square-foot facility, which opened June 14, is operated by
Texas Agricultural Experiment Station and Texas Cooperative Extension,
both entities of the Texas A&M University System. It includes a main building, there
are three 30 ft. x 48 ft. greenhouses and an adjacent 1-acre research and
demonstration vineyard. Laboratory equipment at the facility includes
growth chambers, incubators and field cages for capturing insects.
"This is a dedicated research and education facility built specifically
for the purpose of finding out more about how to mitigate this disease
which costs the Texas wine industry millions of dollars," said Dr. Jim
Supak, Experiment Station director for the Pierce's Disease Research and
Extension Program.
The new facility was built with the cooperation of private individuals,
state and local government, academia, the U.S. Department of Agriculture's
Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, Texas and California wine
industries and many others, said Supak
Experts in various scientific disciplines, including entomology,
molecular biology, and plant pathology and physiology, will collaborate on
research and education related to Pierce's disease. While most of the
facility's researchers are part of the Texas A&M University System,
researchers from the University of Texas-Tyler, the University of
Houston-Downtown and Texas Tech University will also participate in and
contribute to research and education efforts through the facility.
"Our research and education efforts through the facility will focus on
host plants, how Pierce's is transmitted from location to location, and
how to best detect and control it," said Jim Kamas, an Extension fruit
specialist in Fredericksburg.
The new test vineyard at the facility will enable researchers to learn
more about how the disease is transmitted, said Kamas, who will oversee
research activities at the vineyard. It will also provide a more
"scientific context" in which to learn more about wine-grape root stock
susceptibility to the disease and how certain environmental factors may
affect overall wine-grape quality and production.
"The facility provides something that has been needed for a long time –
an infrastructure for studying this disease in the very heart of Texas
wine country," he said.
Previous research has demonstrated that Pierce's disease is caused by
the xylella fastidiosa bacterium which is spread from plant to plant by
small insects called sharpshooters, said Isabelle Lauziere, an Experiment
Station research entomologist who will work from the new facility.
"We're hoping the new facility will help us answer some questions about
why these sharpshooters seem to prefer certain plants over others,"
Lauziere said. "And we hope to identify the natural enemies of these
sharpshooters and use the greenhouses help identify – and raise – these
natural enemies."
The facility will also help researchers get more in-depth information
about plant and insect genetics related to Pierce's disease, and about the
relationship between the disease and the insects that transmit it, she
said.
Cord Switzer, CEO of Fredericksburg Winery, who attended the opening of
the new facility, said mitigating the effects of Pierce's disease was
"vital to the economic security of the industry."
Switzer, who produces about 7,000 cases of wine annually from
wine-grapes bought from eight area vineyards, said support for new
facility was key to the industry's future.
"This really is a multiple-state, multiple-industry issue," Switzer
said. "And we need to not only have a facility like this, but we need to
get funding in place to address this disease on a national level."
Switzer will travel to Washington, D.C. later this month as the Texas
wine industry representative on a team discussing funding for Piece's
disease with U.S. Department of Agriculture officials and congressional
appropriators.
"We have state-related legislation in place to address the issue, but
now we need national funding for efforts related to Piece's disease, he
said. "And this year, for the first time, Texas has a place at the table
during those discussions."
Switzer said mitigating the disease would also benefit agri-tourism
stemming from vineyard and winery tours and help the economy of multiple
communities in wine-producing areas of the U.S.
While the Texas wine industry has an annual economic impact to the
state of more than $1 billion, Pierce's disease is definitely not just a
Texas problem, said Dacota Julson, executive director of the Texas Wine
and Grape Growers Association.
"The disease doesn't have borders, and it affects the California wine
industry and the wine industries in other states," Julson said. "That's
why it's important that groups come together to share research and vision,
like they have done with the new facility in Fredericksburg."
Over the past five years, much progress has been made toward
identifying how Pierce's disease is transmitted and how to manage it, said
Joy Johnson, chairwoman of the Texas Pierce's Disease Growers' Advisory
Board.
"We've already come a long way in addressing this disease," said
Johnson, co-owner of Granite Hill Vineyards. "And while it doesn't affect
wine quality, it can be devastating – and costly – from a grower's
standpoint. "We need to find newer and better ways to manage this disease
so we can educate the vineyard owners on how to achieve the best possible
wine-grape quality and quantity."
A well-focused research and educational effort, such as the one
conceived through the new Fredericksburg facility, can help make that a
reality, said Phil Garcia, regional director for the agriculture
department's Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service.
"When you've got people from government, industry, academia and local
businesses and organizations working together to find practical solutions,
a lot can be accomplished," Garcia said. "I think the facility will
certainly make a serious contribution toward a national effort to find a
solution to the problem of Pierce's disease."
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