Tracking the Fungus Behind the Famine
Ever heard of the Great Potato
Famine? This was a tragic time in Irish history when a plant disease
killed off Ireland’s potato crops in 1845, 1846 and again in 1848.
During this time, more than a million people died of starvation and
illness brought on by malnutrition. About 800,000 people were kicked
out of their homes because they couldn’t afford to pay rent when
their crops failed. Nearly two million Irish abandoned their
homeland to start new lives in other countries, many journeying to
America, and many dying aboard ships along the way.
The plant disease that killed the potatoes was caused by a
fungus, Phytophthora infestans (fie-tof-thor-uh
in-fes-tans).
This news story tells you about a researcher who is recreating
bits of the DNA of the fungus to help in answering questions about
where the 1840s P. infestans came from.
Samples
from Irish Potato Blight May Shed Light on
Crop-Killer (Click the "Back" button at the top left
of your screen to return to this page after reading the
article.)
As the article describes, the scientist is gathering samples of
150-year-old preserved potato leaves to screen them for the fungus
DNA. The DNA screen she has developed may be useful in detecting
P. infestans in potato seeds before they are planted, which
would help prevent blight disease. The fungus is still out there
today in many countries and it still causes disease in potatoes; in
fact, a new strain even more destructive than the 1840s Irish strain
is now threatening potato fields in Russia:
Potato
Late Blight Threatens Russian Crop (Click the
"Back" button at the top left of your screen to return to this page
after reading the article.)
But there has never been such a widespread and devastating
outbreak as during the Irish Potato Famine.
There are many reasons the fungus caused so much destruction in
Ireland in the mid-1800s. One is the way the potatoes were grown. If
you’ve ever left a potato in the pantry for too long, you’ve
probably noticed sprouts coming from the spots or "eyes" on the
vegetable. You can grow a whole new potato plant by cutting out the
eye of a potato and planting it. The new plant will be an exact copy
or clone of the potato you started with. This is called vegetative
propagation (prop-uh-gay-shun) and this is how potatoes
were grown and spread across Ireland (potatoes originated in South
America and were brought to Europe in the 1600s). However, the
original potatoes and therefore almost all of the cloned plants had
no natural ability to fight off P. infestans. So when the
fungus sprang up, it spread like wildfire across the entire
country.
The fungus affected potato crops in other parts of Europe, too.
But no other country relied so heavily on potatoes. Ireland’s
peasants had become very, very dependent on potatoes as their
primary food source. Potatoes were the main dish at every meal and
often the only food on the table because they yield the most amount
of food per acre of land. So when the fungus hit, there was almost
nothing left for the peasants to eat but grass and weeds. It would
be like having bombs blow up every grocery store in your state
leaving you with no place to get food.
While everyone realized that the potatoes were dying, nobody then
knew why. Some blamed the rotting on "the little people." Others
thought it was the work of the Devil and sprinkled holy water in the
fields to try to drive the demons away. Others believed that the
land had simply given out from over-farming. One widely accepted
idea was that the trains that chugged across the country were
discharging electricity into the air that caused the blight. It
wasn’t until 1861 that Anton De Bary, who is considered the father
of modern plant disease study, proved that the fungus caused the
blight disease.
P. infestans is now controlled by chemical fungus
killers and better management of crops.
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