As a result of the 9-11-01 terrorist
attacks on the World Trade Centers and the Pentagon, Congress
created a new U.S. Department of Homeland Security. With heightened
awareness and concern for potential acts of bioterrorism directed
at the U.S. Food and Agricultural System, the Department of Homeland
Security provided funds for USDA/CSREES to develop a National
Plant Diagnostic Network (NPDN), in which the land
grant plant diagnostic laboratories comprised the backbone of
the system. The nation was divided into five regions, with a
regional center designated for each of the five regions. The
P&PDL, as part of the North
Central Plant Diagnostic Network (NCPDN) region has been
working with their counterparts at other land grant institutions
to prepare against plant diseases and pests that might pose a
threat to American agriculture. Part of this response includes
providing training protocols for threat pathogens for the “first
detectors”. First detectors typically include individuals
such as county extension educators, growers, crop consultants
and regulatory field inspectors. Once trained, first detectors
will be on the look out for unusual or new diseases to submit
to the diagnostic laboratories. This will greatly reduce the
time between introduction and detection and, subsequently remediation.
In light of this national initiative,
the P&PDL provided
a 2003 training session to ANR educators on Homeland Security
and the threat of bioterrorist attacks on agriculture. The training
included information on the NPDN, the NCPDN, Soybean
Rust, and how the newly formed National Plant Diagnostic Network will help
provide real-time diagnostics and training opportunities through the Plant
Diagnostic Information Service (PDIS)
A poster
display on
these topics was also presented at the 2003 Annual Extension
Conference.