Ug99 gets funding

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Published: November 28, 2013

Agriculture Canada is receiving an extra $1.26 million to research ways to control the wheat disease Ug99.

Researchers in Winnipeg have identified three genes providing resistance to Ug99. They are now developing molecular markers to help with the wheat breeding efforts.

The additional funding will help scientists discover and genetically map these sources of resistance.

Ug99 is a wheat stem rust first discovered in Uganda in 1999. Crops from Africa to western Asia are affected, and an estimated 90 percent of global wheat varieties are susceptible to the disease.

Ug99 is not yet present in North America, but Agriculture Canada scientists have been working to not only protect the country’s wheat crops but also help the global effort in protecting world wheat supplies.

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William DeKay

William DeKay

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