Seems that it's killing plants all over the east coast now.

That's a minimum of 13 days between showing symptoms and being able to release spores.The first symptoms become visible within 3−5 days of initial infection. The new pustules can mature to release spores in 10–12 days.
Joel wrote:There would have been tens of millions of spores released into the atmosphere by the time the government got involved.
shibui wrote:this and other exotic diseases comes down to some individual flouting our quarantine laws.
It is almost certain that the 23 April ID was NOT the source of the outbreak. They just happened to identify that their stock was infected with something and were responsible enough to report it.
EdwardH wrote: Hopefully the CSIRO can find a critter that feeds on the spores or pustules thereby slowing the spread and impact of M.R.
Very well said. That is by definition...Evolution whether you like it or not.treeman wrote:I would like to offer a different perspective.
Firstly, with all the international travel going on at this stage in history, it is inevitable that this rust and other diseases will find their way here as spores on clothing etc. So trying to blame a particular group of individuals is really a waste of time and of no consequence in the long term.
Secondly, looking at the bigger picture, this planet has had episodes of extinction for much longer than the piddling amount of time humans have been walking around on it. Extinction is a part of the natural system and humans are at the moment also part of it. The fact is that only in their minds are humans or their environment any more important than bacteria. Sooner or later humans will also become extinct. Extinction is going on right now and always will. It is a mistake to see the environment as being static. The only static thing is change. In time as Australia drifts north, most of the indigenous flora will either disappear or evolve to adapt to a warmer and wetter (or drier or colder) climate.
The planet will go on regardless and there is nothing humans can do to change it. In the end, whether this change is fast or slow, large or small does not make the slightest difference as far as the planet Earth is concerned.
As long as there is rainfall and reasonably stable temperatures, there will always be flora of some sort and there will always be fauna to exploit it. That is how the planet has always worked. Myrtle rust is not new, it has probably existed as long as the myrtle family has.
Trying to desperately hang on the status quo because of romantic or nostalgic reasons is only a human trait. The environment does not care about humans, it just is, and it will continue to be whatever natural circumstances allow it to be. Trying to ''keep'' our environment close to us and unchanged or controlled is only putting off the inevitable and probably only in our minds. Of course any life form including humans wants to continue to exist but really, what difference does it make whether it does or not? My point - enjoy what you have now, realize that it is temporary and relax.
That should read 'solve the problem of OUR possible extinction' I think Rory. Wherever we go we will almost certainly displace indigenous life forms, large and small. That's always been the way on this planet and I see no reason why we'd change just because we went a bit further. Whenever any life form moves to a new area it either displaces some or all of the local forms that occupy the same niche or it fails to colonise.that we will be able to fly around the universe and populate other areas, like giant floating mini worlds. Thus we will solve the problem of possible extinction.
Actually everything in nature lives in balance until people get involved (and try to control everything).Perhaps we can introduce a new pest to tackle the Myrtle Rust.
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Introducing cane toads was a big mistake but it doesn't mean that there isn't a solution to the MR problem. For the record there IS a solution to the cane toad problem. A few years ago scientists discovered that cane toad poison repels fish etc but attracts cane toad tad poles. When a small amount of the poison was placed in a large bucket/container, the tadpoles swam into it. Scoop up the container with tadpoles and next to no young in that area that year. Done on a large scale this would dramatically reduce the cane toad scourge. The solution is now just waiting to be implemented.It worked out well in QLD with the cane toad