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GAO-05-668R 1 (2005-05-17)

handle is hein.gao/gaocrptarua0001 and id is 1 raw text is: 



  SGAO

       Accountability * Integrity  Reliability
United States Government Accountability Office
Washington, DC 20548




      May 17, 2005

      The Honorable Tom Harkin
      Ranking Democratic Member
      Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry
      United States Senate

      Subject: Agriculture Production: USDA 's Preparation for Asian Soybean Rust

      Dear Senator Harkin:

      In November 2004, Asian Soybean Rust (ASR) was discovered in the United States
      in Louisiana. In the following weeks, it was found in eight additional southern
      states. ASR is a harmful fungal disease that has spread throughout many other
      parts of the world, including Asia, Australia, Africa, and South America. ASR can
      infect over 90 host plant species, including legumes, such as dry beans, peas, and
      kudzu, a plant that grows wild primarily in the southern United States. Although
      the disease has caused significant soybean crop loss and increased production
      costs in many other countries, ASR arrived in the United States too late in the
      crop year to have any effect on soybean production in 2004, and scientists were
      uncertain about how it would survive the winter climates in the United States.
      However, in February 2005, researchers found that ASR had successfully over-
      wintered on kudzu in Florida, and it was subsequently detected in Georgia on
      soybean plants in April 2005. Since environmental factors, such as rainfall,
      humidity, and temperature, affect both the severity and incidence of ASR,
      scientists do not know how widespread or damaging the disease will be in the
      United States during the 2005 crop year. The U.S. Department of Agriculture
      (USDA) is responsible for monitoring and addressing the problems posed by ASR.
      The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is responsible for licensing
      fungicides to treat the disease.

      You asked us to determine (1) USDA's efforts to develop and implement an ASR
      surveillance strategy to identify and protect against ASR's entry into the United
      States and to test and verify suspect cases; (2) USDA's strategy for minimizing the
      effects of ASR now that the fungus has arrived in the United States; and (3) the
      progress that USDA, EPA, and others have made in developing, testing, and
      licensing fungicides to treat ASR and in identifying and breeding ASR-resistant
      or -tolerant soybeans. We provided your staff with a formal briefing on our
      findings on April 28, 2005. In that briefing, we cited USDA's lack of funding for
      ASR oversight as an area of concern. On May 12, 2005, the Secretary of


GAO-05-668R Asian Soybean Rust

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