O InPP participou no Fórum Nacional de Clubes Ciência Viva na Escola, que teve lugar no dia 27 de março, integrando a Mostra de Ciência e Tecnologia com um stand dedicado à proteção das plantas.
Neste espaço, foram apresentados diversos materiais demonstrativos, incluindo placas de Petri com fungos e bactérias, plantas, algas e exemplos de produtos formulados, com o objetivo de despertar o interesse e a curiosidade dos visitantes para a importância da saúde das plantas e da investigação científica nesta área.
Ao longo do dia, a Gestora de Comunicação, Inês Ferreira, e o Gestor de Inovação, Paulo Madeira, dinamizaram o contacto com o público visitante, explicando de que forma a investigação em proteção das plantas contribui para melhorar a proteção das culturas e promover uma agricultura mais resiliente e sustentável.
O Fórum Nacional de Clubes Ciência Viva na Escola decorreu no CNEMA, em Santarém, reunindo escolas, centros Ciência Viva, universidades, centros de investigação e diversas outras entidades, num encontro dedicado à ciência, tecnologia e inovação.
O InPP agradece a todos os visitantes que passaram pelo seu stand, destacando a importância destes momentos de partilha para promover o conhecimento científico junto da comunidade.
No dia 26 de março, o InPP participou numa sessão promovida pela Agência Nacional de Inovação (ANI), em Lisboa, que contou com a presença de uma comitiva da República Checa ligada ao setor das biotecnologias.
Em representação do InPP estiveram Cristina Azevedo, Diretora de Biosoluções, e Paulo Madeira, Gestor de Inovação, que apresentou a instituição e as suas principais áreas de atuação e competências.
A iniciativa teve como principal objetivo identificar oportunidades de cooperação entre entidades portuguesas e checas, nomeadamente nas áreas de transferência de tecnologia, codesenvolvimento, ensaios pré-clínicos e diagnósticos, coinvestimento e internacionalização da inovação.
A sessão contou com a participação de representantes de entidades relevantes da República Checa, incluindo Petra Kinzlova, CEO da Prague.bio, Katarina Psenakova, Head of Biology da PharmTheon, bem como representantes da Embaixada da República Checa e da Academia das Ciências da República Checa.
Este encontro contribuiu para reforçar o posicionamento do InPP na promoção de parcerias internacionais e no desenvolvimento de soluções inovadoras, evidenciando o compromisso contínuo da instituição em fortalecer redes de colaboração científica e tecnológica e em contribuir para o crescimento e internacionalização da inovação.
O InPP marcou presença no Encontro com orizicultores e técnicos(as) em Portugal, promovido pela EDAF, que decorreu no dia 5 de março, no Pólo de Inovação de Salvaterra de Magos, em Santarém.
A Diretora de Biosoluções do InPP, Cristina Azevedo, integrou o painel de oradores convidados, tendo apresentado a comunicação intitulada “A problemática da Pyricularia na cultura do arroz”. A apresentação incidiu sobre os principais desafios fitossanitários associados a esta doença, que continua a constituir uma das maiores ameaças à produção de arroz a nível mundial e também em Portugal.
O encontro reuniu produtores, técnicos e especialistas da fileira do arroz, proporcionando um espaço de partilha de conhecimento e debate sobre soluções atuais e em desenvolvimento para o controlo da piriculariose. Foram igualmente abordados outros temas relevantes para a sustentabilidade e produtividade da cultura, nomeadamente a gestão da fertilização.
A participação do InPP neste tipo de iniciativas reforça o compromisso da instituição com a inovação, a transferência de conhecimento e o desenvolvimento de soluções sustentáveis para a agricultura nacional.
O InPP agradece à EDAF e ao COTArroz o convite e a organização deste importante encontro, esperando que esta colaboração continue a fortalecer-se no futuro.
On March 18th, InnovPlantProtect (InPP) took part in the Ucanorte XXI Field Day, organized by our associate Fertiprado.
The morning kicked off with an auditorium session featuring InPP. António Saraiva, executive director of CoLAB, introduced InPP and the different innovative solutions and technologies that are being developed to protect crops. Ricardo Ramiro, director of the Data Management and Risk Analysis department, was another speaker who presented the services that can be of use to corn silage producers.
Samira Andrade, a researcher at Fertiprado, shared the promising results of her collaboration with the InPP team on seed coating.
Many thanks to Fertiprado for the invitation and the opportunity to strengthen our partnership!
Image credits: Fertiprado
Photos from left to right: António Saraiva, executive director of InPP; Ricardo Ramiro, director of the Data Management and Risk Analysis department and Samira Andrade, Fertiprado researcher collaborating with CoLAB.
InPP is the leader of a project that aims to develop sustainable and effective biopesticides to control two of the most important diseases of the olive grove, gafa and tuberculosis. This biopesticide, obtained from the plant biomass left over from the production of cannabis for medicinal purposes, will innovate and boost sustainability in this booming industry in Portugal. With an investment of 150,000 euros from the “la Caixa” Foundation, ValorCannBio promises to revolutionize the sector, positioning it as an important player in the circular economy and in reducing waste.
You have to travel to the heart of the Mediterranean, one of the regions most vulnerable to climate change, to get to the olive grove, an ancient crop and economic engine, and understand the uphill battle it faces. Gafa and tuberculosis, two of the most important olive diseases, threaten the production of olive oil, one of Portugal's most valuable export products, especially in the Alentejo, where 75% of national production is concentrated.
Gafa, caused by the fungus Colletotrichum sp., can decimate up to 80% of production, representing losses of more than 50 million euros and threatening traditional Portuguese varieties such as Galega. Tuberculosis, caused by the bacterium Pseudomonas savastanoi pv. savastanoi (Pss), compromises the quality of olive oil, and current copper-based control methods are ineffective and harmful to the environment.
Left photo: Olive grove, agricultural crop in focus of the ValorCannBio project; Center photo: Olive infected with the fungus Colletotrichum, The bacterium, which causes gafa, one of the most important diseases of the olive grove; Photo on the right: Olive tree infected with the bacterium Pseudomonas savastanoi, which causes tuberculosis, one of the most important diseases of the olive grove.
Cannabis: A New Hope for the Olive Grove
In a promising turnaround, the production of medical cannabis (with the scientific name Cannabis sativa) flourishes in Portugal, including in the Alentejo, with the country on its way to becoming one of the world's largest producers. However, the flower, rich in valuable compounds such as THC and CBD, is the only part of the plant that is used, while the remaining biomass legally has to be incinerated, a process with high economic and environmental costs.
What if this biomass, with its more than 500 chemical compounds, some of which have proven antibacterial and antifungal properties that are already known and others that have yet to be discovered, could be transformed into a solution to the challenges facing the olive grove? This is where the ValorCannBio: Valorization of medicinal cannabis by-products as a biopesticide for olive groves, a beacon of innovation and sustainability.
ValorCannBio: Science and Sustainability in Action
Led by InPP, in partnership with NOVA FCT's Associated Laboratory for Green Chemistry (LAQV requimte) and the companies GreenBePharma (GBP) and AGR Global, ValorCannBio is transforming surplus biomass from medical cannabis into effective and sustainable biopesticides against Gafa and Tuberculosis.
This is the first time that InPP has joined projects related to innovation and sustainability in the cannabis production industry and it wants to play a decisive role in the value chain. “Our team of researchers is developing sustainable biofungicides and biobactericides, using new extraction methods with environmentally friendly solvents. We are creating solutions that increase the efficiency and sustainability of this industry,” says Tatiana Gil, an InPP researcher involved in the project.
But the team of researchers isn't stopping there. “We are still unraveling the secrets of endophytic cannabis bacteria, microorganisms that live in symbiosis with the plant, as biological control agents,” he adds.
And how do you turn a cannabis leaf into a shield for the olive grove? Tatiana Gil explains the process step by step: “First, we test the effectiveness of the extracts in the laboratory, like detectives looking for clues. Then we formulate the biopesticide and assess its impact in a greenhouse, in a controlled environment. Finally, we take the solution to the field for the final test.”.
Tatiana Gil, InnovPlantProtect researcher, analyzes samples of cannabis leaf extracts as part of the ValorCannBio project.
An Impact that extends across the Territory
Cristina Azevedo, InPP researcher and project leader, anticipates the impact of ValorCannBio: “All of these impacts will be felt in the municipality of Elvas, where the project will take place, but it is expected that they will extend to the entire olive-growing region from Trás-os-Montes to the Algarve, where production losses due to gafa and tuberculosis are increasing, and eventually to Mediterranean countries where these diseases are equally prevalent.”.
ValorCannBio not only aims to offer a sustainable alternative to chemical pesticides, but also opens up a new way of valorizing the remaining biomass of the cannabis plant that is not used for medicinal purposes, transforming it from a waste product into a valuable resource.
“We want to create a parallel and complementary industry to the production of medicinal cannabis, involving the production of biopesticides,” reveals Cristina Azevedo, “which will pave the way for other innovations,” she adds.
A Sustainable Future for the Olive Grove
The ValorCannBio project is an example of how innovation and sustainability can go hand in hand, offering solutions to the challenges of modern agriculture. By harnessing the potential of medicinal cannabis, ValorCannBio is helping to build a greener, more prosperous future for olive groves and the planet.
With the support of the “la Caixa” Foundation, in partnership with Banco BPI and the Foundation for Science and Technology (FCT), ValorCannBio, which began in October 2024, promises to be a success story until November 2027.
By the end of spring, the National Vector Insect Monitoring System project team will be working on the Xylella fastidiosa (SNM_XylellaVt), funded by the PRR, challenges citizens to keep an eye on plant foams: by detecting foams on plants, recording the data in the app and filling in the online form, it helps them to create an up-to-date map of the temporal and spatial distribution of the appearance of the juvenile stage of 4 species of leafhoppers in Portugal, which, once adult, are responsible for carrying the quarantine bacterium Xylella fastidiosafrom one plant to another.
The presence of the bacteria has already been detected in Portugal Xylella fastidiosa in four species of leafhoppers in mainland Portugal, but little is known about the current temporal and spatial distribution of these insects in our country. With this in mind, the project team SNM_XylellaVt, challenges citizens to be on the lookout for foams, located mainly on the stems of plants, in their daily lives, on vacation in Portugal, or when walking in natural spaces, olive groves, vineyards, pastures, orchards or in the montado. Foams are signs of the presence of these insect species that are vectors for the transmission of the bacteria Xylella fastidiosa.
Left and center photos: Examples of foams found in plants; Right photo: foam leafhopper, an insect that transmits the bacteria. Xylella fastidiosa
“With the help of all citizens, we will be able to understand the population dynamics of insect vectors and their relationship with plants, which could help us plan measures to combat Xylella fastidiosa, preventing the spread of this bacterium. This is very relevant given that we don't have a direct curative treatment for this bacterium, which makes its control extremely difficult,” explains Ilaria Marengo, a partner in the SNM_XylellaVt project and researcher at InPP. “Destroying infected plants and controlling insect vectors are currently the main measures to prevent the spread of the bacterium,” she adds.
Everyone can contribute to the “Help us save your plants!” campaign that is currently underway: all you have to do is, when you spot the leafhopper foams, take photos of the foams, located on the stems of the plants, and of the plant where you found them, record the data in the ODK Collect 2024 application available for your cell phone (see image below), record the date and geographical location - if possible with GPS coordinates - or alternatively, submit this data using a online form on the project platform. Once you have submitted your data, you will be able to view it on the available map aqui.
Steps on how to install and use the ODK Collect 2024 application on your cell phone or tablet. To install, go to the guide on the DGAV website here.
The “Help us save your plants!” campaign is being developed as part of the SNM_XylellaVt project, which is currently underway. SNM_XylellaVt, led by the Centro Regional Coordination and Development Commission (CCDR CENTRO), and in which InPP is a partner, aims to contain the disease to the areas identified so far and to stop it spreading to the rest of Portugal. To this end, it is creating a network for monitoring the X. fastidiosa and its vector insect(s), in particular the foam leafhoppers, with the scientific name Philaenus spumarius, Philaenus tesselatus, Neophilaenus lineatus e Cicadella viridis, This will enable the development of new tools, such as risk forecasting models that will allow the National Agricultural Warning Service (SNAA) to warn in real time about the economic attack levels (NEA) for these insects, and prevent the spread of infection to crops that are relevant to national agriculture.
In 2019, the bacterium Xylella fastidiosa was first detected in Portugal, in the metropolitan area of Porto, and has since been detected in other areas of mainland Portugal. This bacterium attacks a wide range of plants, posing a risk to agricultural and forestry crops of significant economic importance.
For more information on the bacteria Xylella fastidiosa access the website of the Directorate-General for Food and Veterinary (DGAV) here.