Soetikno S. Sastroutomo, Keng-Yeang Lum and Wai-Hong Loke
S.S. Sastroutomo, K.Y. Lum, ASEANET; W.H. Loke, CAB International South-East Asia Regional Centre, P.O. Box 210, 43400 UPM Serdang, Selangor, Malaysia; e-mail: (1) [email protected]
ASEANET is the Southeast Asian regional network of BioNET-INTERNATIONAL, a technical cooperation network for sustainable development through capacity building in taxonomy and related sciences. Taxonomy, biological information and collections underpin not only quarantine and plant health but also invasive alien species management. ASEANET considers these interlinked, recognizing that invasive alien species are threats not only to biodiversity and the environment but also to sectors such as agriculture, forestry, livestock, aquaculture, wildlife and human health. In 2001 - 2002, ASEANET, in collaboration with the Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry Australia, conducted two surveys of countries of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN): Needs assessment in taxonomy and biosystematics for plant pathogenic organisms in countries of South East Asia and Needs assessment in taxonomy of arthropod pests of plants in countries of South East Asia: biosystematics, collection and information management. In 2002 - 2003, ASEANET, in collaboration with CAB International South-East Asia Regional Centre, similarly conducted a survey on plant health capabilities in Southeast Asia. Key findings of these three assessments of relevance to invasive alien species in agriculture are: many ASEAN countries have basic capacity problems in describing the health status of their agricultural and forestry industries, leading to serious constraints in the development of new export markets; most ASEAN countries lack human resources in taxonomy, from collection and curation of pest specimens (including invasives) to the identification of specific taxonomic groups; scientific reference collections of pests and pathogens are inadequate; local collections and taxonomic expertise are not networked for effective and efficient mobilization and utilization of valuable resources; and pest information databases are scattered and largely do not meet IPPC standards. To address these gaps, ASEANET has followed up with a number of capacity-building initiatives.
ASEANET is the Southeast Asian regional network (a "locally organized and operated partnership", LOOP) of BioNET-INTERNATIONAL. It was established in 1998, after endorsement by the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) senior ministers for the environment. The ASEANET member countries are Brunei Darussalam, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam. Currently the technical secretariat is located at CAB International South-East Asia Regional Centre, MARDI Complex, Serdang, Malaysia.
ASEANETs mission is capacity building in taxonomy and related sciences to enable ASEAN to manage its great biodiversity riches for sustainable development, and to prepare member economies for compliance with the sanitary and phytosanitary rules under the World Trade Organizations Agreement on the Application of Sanitary and Phytosanitary Measures.
The work programmes of ASEANET are:
Agricultural and rural development is vital for sustainable growth and poverty reduction for developing countries such as in the ASEAN region. The development challenge facing these countries is to manage their plant health to maximize productivity, address food security concerns, conserve natural resources, and generate rural income by participating fully in international trade in agricultural products. The industrialized and more advanced of the developing countries of the region also need robust plant health infrastructure to manage plant pests, to preserve the integrity of quarantine borders and to support trade in agricultural commodities.
In order to address these challenges, ASEAN countries must have a detailed knowledge of their plant health status and be able to access information on the biology, distribution, host range and economic status of plant pests and pathogens. Biological collections contain much of this information and are of fundamental importance to regional countries as they seek to improve their quarantine security, protect agriculture and natural resources, and underpin market access negotiations in the global trading environment.
This paper summarizes the results of three surveys. Two were needs assessments conducted by ASEANET in collaboration with the Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry Australia in 2001 - 2002: one in taxonomy of arthropod pests of plants (Naumann and Mamat, 2002), the other in taxonomy and biosystematics for plant pathogenic organisms in Southeast Asia (Evans, Lum and Murdoch, 2002). In addition, in 2002 - 2003, a survey exercise was carried out in collaboration with CAB International South-East Asia Regional Centre on plant health capability in Southeast Asia (Sastroutomo, Loke and Lum, 2003).
The objectives of the first two needs assessment surveys were:
to compile information related to the status of institutional capacities and practices in taxonomy and identification of pests, including collection management, data handling, information management, infrastructure and human resources
to assess the existing level of diagnostic and taxonomic expertise available to support pest collections and the areas of critical need
to determine the needs of ASEAN countries to achieve realistic self-reliance as envisaged for an operational regional network in taxonomy.
The objective for the third survey, conducted through a questionnaire, was to compile information related to national plant protection organizations in each ASEAN country, i.e., on human resources, facilities (buildings and equipment), documented procedures and on priorities for technical assistance.
Key findings from these three surveys include information on human resources of the NPPOs, the status of relevant biological collections and the priorities for technical assistance.
Human resources of NPPOs
Numbers of entry and exit points and inspectors involved in nine countries of ASEAN are presented in table 1.
Table 1: The number of entry/exit points and inspectors involved in nine ASEAN countries.
Country |
Airports |
Seaports |
Land-border ports |
|||
No. of points |
Personnel |
No. of points |
Personnel |
No. of points |
Personnel |
|
Brunei Darussalam |
1 |
6 |
2 |
5 |
3 |
13 |
Indonesia |
42 |
180 |
85 |
305 |
4 |
15 |
Laos |
3 |
? |
0 |
0 |
16 |
15 |
Malaysia |
12 |
91 |
22 |
97 |
14 |
99 |
Myanmar |
2 |
25 |
3 |
1 |
6 |
16 |
Singapore |
1 |
4 |
1 |
4 |
2 |
4 |
Philippines |
22 |
>100 |
>80 |
>100 |
>80 |
>80 |
Thailand |
7 |
21 |
8 |
23 |
20 |
27 |
Vietnam |
3 |
9 |
8 |
? |
40 |
110 |
ASEAN: Association of Southeast Asian Nations. Cambodia, also an ASEAN country, is not included in these results.
Table 2: Diagnostic capabilities in nine ASEAN countries.
Technical capability |
Human resources total in 9 countries |
|
Within NPPO |
Outside NPPO |
|
Fruitfly specialists |
25-30 |
24 |
Diptera specialists |
6 |
19 |
Lepidoptera specialists |
5 |
30 |
Coleoptera specialists |
8 |
25 |
Hemiptera specialists |
3 |
19 |
Stored product specialists |
70 |
36 |
Thysanoptera specialists |
2 |
17 |
Arachnida specialists |
2 |
17 |
Mollusc specialists |
3 |
23 |
General entomologists |
143 |
>106 |
Fungal pathology specialists |
29 |
>55 |
Bacteriology specialists |
12 |
43 |
Plant virology specialists |
11 |
33 |
General pathology specialists |
120 |
>80 |
Nematologists |
14 |
>23 |
Weed scientists |
23 |
>25 |
ASEAN: Association of Southeast Asian Nations; NPPO: national plant protection organization. Cambodia, also an ASEAN country, is not included in these results.
Table 2 shows the total number of specialists in different fields related to plant protection in the NPPO as well as those outside the NPPO in different countries of ASEAN.
Status of disease herbaria, pathogens and arthropods collections
In most countries of the ASEAN, biological collections including invasive alien species are lodged in several different agencies or institutions such as national ministries for agriculture and forestry, state or provincial ministries for agriculture and forestry, crop-specific research institutions, museums of natural history and universities. Valuable collections of specimens may also be held by scientists in research facilities working on pests and diseases of specific crops; or scientists may build collections of particular taxonomic groups. These collections and those in universities are at risk when institutional priorities change or staff retire or move on. Identifying these collections and securing them against loss will be important.
Institutional responsibilities for maintaining disease herbaria, collections of plant pathogens and arthropods (including invasive species) in a number of countries visited are ill-defined. This is reflected, in part at least, in the low level of resources allocated to maintaining these specimens and the poor state of some herbaria. The well-being of these valuable national resources is largely dependent on a small number of dedicated scientists in government agencies, research establishments and universities.
Table 3: Technical assistance priorities in ASEAN countries.
Plant health component |
Total scores |
|
Phytosanitary legislation |
26 |
|
Diagnostic capabilities |
|
|
|
Human resources |
43 |
Buildings |
28 |
|
Equipment |
33 |
|
Pest risk analysis |
|
|
|
Human resources |
45 |
Buildings |
31 |
|
Equipment |
36 |
|
Surveillance |
|
|
|
Human resources |
40 |
Buildings |
27 |
|
Equipment |
34 |
|
Exotic pest response |
|
|
|
Human resources |
41 |
Buildings |
28 |
|
Equipment |
34 |
|
Inspection system |
|
|
|
Human resources |
41 |
Buildings |
28 |
|
Equipment |
32 |
ASEAN: Association of Southeast Asian Nations. Note: Maximum total scores for nine countries is 45. Cambodia, also an ASEAN country, is not included in these results.
It appears that none of the collections of arthropod pests or plant disease herbaria including invasive species in ASEAN countries have dedicated funding and none have statutory protection. A few museums holding pests and plant disease specimens in broader collections have protection and a few receive dedicated funding. Some of the governments are beginning to give greater recognition to quarantine and sanitary and phytosanitary issues in the new global trading environment. However, this recognition has not been enough to attract the resources needed to build the essential capacity in taxonomy and collection management that most ASEAN countries will need in order to comply with the SPS Agreement. Some countries are looking to donor agencies for assistance to build capacity.
Technical assistance priorities
Technical assistance priorities in the different countries of ASEAN are listed in table 3.
From the information offered, it was noted that technical assistance related to human resources are given high priority, i.e., for pest risk analysis, diagnostic capabilities, exotic pest response and inspection system, in contrast to technical assistance for buildings or equipment.
The surveys identified a number of matters that need to be addressed to improve the disease herbaria, pathogen and arthropod collections in ASEAN countries in order to bring these to an adequate standard to support national plant health policy, including pest risk assessments to underpin market access negotiations. These matters are listed below:
There is a need to strengthen and define institutional responsibilities for developing and maintaining disease herbaria and pest collections including invasive alien species.
There is a need to increase the number of trained plant health professionals in relevant agencies and institutions, especially in the following areas:
identification, diagnostics and early detection of pests, including invasive alien species
surveillance, monitoring and risk analysis
database management related to specimens.
There is a need for a regional network of plant health professionals to assist them to identify pests of quarantine importance and invasive alien species.
There is a need to improve infrastructure and support to ensure the maintenance of existing disease herbaria and pest collections (including invasive alien species) as well as to rehabilitate them to acceptable international standards to support risk analyses.
There is a need to generate comprehensive data on local pests or improve "passport" data on existing specimens to meet the IPPC standard for a pest record (ISPM 8: Determination of pest status in an area).
There is a need to improve and sustain information systems for data on specimens held in the herbaria and collections.
There is a need to improve understanding among some senior managers of the importance of invasive alien species in biodiversity conservation issues.
References
Evans, G., Lum, K.Y. & Murdoch, L. 2002. Needs assessment in taxonomy and biosystematics for plant pathogenic organisms in countries of South East Asia. A report for AusAID (available from the Office of the Chief Plant Protection Officer, Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry Australia, Canberra, Australia). 67 pp.
Naumann, I.D. & Mamat, Jusoh Md. 2002. Needs assessment in taxonomy of arthropod pests of plants in countries of South East Asia: Biosystematics, collection and information management. A report for AusAID (available from the Office of the Chief Plant Protection Officer, Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry Australia, Canberra, Australia). 118 pp.
Sastroutomo, S.S., Loke, W.H. & Lum, K.Y. 2003. Strengthening plant health infra- and infostructure of ASEAN economies to enhance market access in agricultural trade under WTO/SPS rules. Internal report of a Partnership Facility project to CAB International. 12 pp.