“It’s unlikely anyone here is infested but if you are and
don’t know, you will affect your neighbors,” said Russ Ingham of
Oregon State University’s department of botany
and plant pathology. He talked to farmers at an annual potato grower
seminar Feb. 15 in Merrill.
The survey is extensive, targeting all seed fields and 10 percent of
randomly selected
production fields. Procedure involves taking a tablespoon of soil
for a sample every 10 feet in a field. Oregon Department of
Agriculture officials are conducting the survey in Oregon.
Several factors are contributing to the urgency and importance of
the survey. Ingham said the pest can be devastating to farmers,
cutting yield by 80 percent.
Eradication
problematic
Eradication is problematic since it can survive in the soil without
a host for up to 30 years. Identified infested fields in Idaho are
involved in a five-year eradication plan that involves chemical
application, crop rotation and other methods.
Trade also can be heavily affected by infestation. Canada, South
Korea and Mexico banned all imports from Idaho, and Japan is
refusing all potato shipments from the U.S. because of the pest.
Grower Sid Staunton of Tulelake said officials in California
conducted a similar survey of agricultural land last year and is
expected to continue this year.
Staunton said identification of the pest in one’s soil can be
disastrous, and catching it early can lead to quicker treatment and
a quicker return to production.
“I would rather know than not know,” he said.