<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="1"?>
<pra datepubli="2018-07-24" lastupdate="2018-07-24">
 <uuid>95b5943a-10bd-4cbe-ae8e-898bcef92573</uuid>
 <country>EU</country>
 <datepra>2017-05-24</datepra>
 <title>Pest risk assessment of Atropellis spp. for the EU territory</title>
 <description><![CDATA[<p>Following a request from the European Commission, the EFSA Plant Health (PLH) Panel performed a risk assessment for&nbsp;<em>Atropellis</em> spp. in the EU focusing on the risk of entry, the host range and the potential impacts.&nbsp;<em>Atropellis</em> is a fungal pathogen of several&nbsp;<em>Pinus</em> spp. in North America. The pathogen has not been reported from Europe and is a quarantine pest regulated in Annex IIAI of Council Directive 2000/29/EC on plants (other than fruit and seeds), isolated bark and wood of&nbsp;<em>Pinus</em>. The main pathways of entry considered were&nbsp;<em>Pinus</em> plants, wood and isolated bark. Given the ban of importing&nbsp;<em>Pinus</em> plants from outside Europe into the EU and the lack of information on EU imports of isolated&nbsp;<em>Pinus</em> bark, only the wood pathway was assessed quantitatively. The conclusion of the assessment of entry for scenario A0 (current regulatory situation) is that the risk of entry of&nbsp;<em>Atropellis</em> spp. is close to zero. This conclusion is expected to apply also in the case of removing the specific&nbsp;<em>Atropellis</em> regulations, because of the remaining generic&nbsp;<em>Pinus</em> requirements, as well as in a scenario with additional risk reduction options. The uncertainty associated with this assessment is relatively limited, given that all the quartiles of the estimated distribution of the number of potential founder populations are close to zero. For the North American&nbsp;<em>Pinus</em> spp. known to be susceptible and widely planted in the EU (mainly&nbsp;<em>P.&nbsp;contorta</em> and&nbsp;<em>P.&nbsp;strobus</em>), the damage observed in North America (loss of wood quality, stem deformations, mortality in young stands, environmental consequences) is expected in the EU to a similar (or higher) degree, should the pathogen be introduced. Similar impacts are expected on the European&nbsp;<em>Pinus</em> spp. known to be host of&nbsp;<em>Atropellis</em> spp. These include widespread and locally abundant species such as&nbsp;<em>P.&nbsp;nigra, P.&nbsp;sylvestris</em> and&nbsp;<em>P.&nbsp;pinaster</em>. There are, however, large uncertainties associated with this impact assessment due to the unknown susceptibility of several other&nbsp;<em>Pinus</em> spp. present in Europe. There is a need for research on the susceptibility to&nbsp;<em>Atropellis</em> spp. of those European&nbsp;<em>Pinus</em> spp. </p>]]></description>
 <author id="16">
  <fullname>EPPO Secretariat (EPPO entered these PRAs in the platform but please contact EFSA if you have questions)</fullname>
  <institute id="8">European Food Safety Authority</institute>
 </author>
 <organisms>
  <organism eppocode="1ATRPG">Atropellis</organism>
  <organism eppocode="ATRPAP">Atropellis apiculata</organism>
  <organism eppocode="ATRPPC">Atropellis pinicola</organism>
  <organism eppocode="ATRPPP">Atropellis piniphila</organism>
  <organism eppocode="ATRPSP">Atropellis sp.</organism>
  <organism eppocode="ATRPTI">Atropellis tingens</organism>
 </organisms>
 <hosts>
  <host eppocode="1PIUG">Pinus</host>
 </hosts>
 <praarea>
  <area isocode="9L">EU</area>
 </praarea>
 <files>
  <file type="1" size="0">
   <title>link</title>
   <url>https://pra.eppo.int/getfile/5e7547b3-451c-46d4-a2be-2dee62106ccf</url>
  </file>
 </files>
</pra>
