logo association sfp

Société Française de Phytopathologie

Une association sur les maladies des plantes...
et au service de celles et ceux qui les étudient !

Presentation of the SFP

Vocation

The French Society of Plant Pathology (SFP) is a non-profit association, created on May 12, 1971, whose objectives are:

  • to encourage and develop studies in phytopathology, science which studies plant diseases and their remedies;
  • to facilitate relations researchers in this discipline;
  • to promote the dissemination of new data and knowledge in plant pathology.

SFP is a member of EFPP (European Foundation for Plant Pathology) and of ISPP (International Society for Plant Pathology), which gathers all the national societies of plant pathology, in particular APS, BSPP and SIPaV with which SFP has close relations. SFP is also an associate member of COSSAF (College of Academic Societies of France) and of BioGée (Federation of Life Sciences and Technologies, Earth Sciences and the Environment).

 

Statutes

See the statutes of the association : Statuts 

 

A brief history of the SFP (by Ivan Sache)

Compared to other national phytopathological societies, the Société Française de Phytopathologie, established in 1971, is of very recent creation. Plant pathology, however, is a much older tradition in France: the first Professor of Plant Pathology, Eugène Delacroix, was appointed in 1903 in Paris at the Institut National Agronomique (now, AgroParisTech). The society was indeed refounded on the ashes of the fomer, venerable Société de Pathologie Végétale de France, established in 1914.  Passing time and the disruption caused by the Second World War explain that the origina society felle into undeserved oblivion.

The Société de Pathologie Végétale de France was founded on 11 February 1914. The society hold its first meeting on 1 May 1914 in Paris. Article 1 of the Statutes of the society defines its goals as follows :
1. To contribute in the progress in the study of plant diseases, of insects and other animals damaging plants, and of the means of preservation against their foes. 
2. To facilitate, by all means it has available, the studies and works by its members.

The society organized a monthly meeting every first Friday, whose minutes were published in a bi-monthly bulletin, the Bulletin de la Société de Pathologie Végétale de France.

The text introducing the first issue of the bulletin explains, in a very modern way, the rationale of the establishment of a society dedicated to plant pathology. This parallels with the establishment of plant pathology as a discipline separated from botany.
The transformation of cropping systems, fostered by the diversity and speed of trade of plant products, have had for consequence the dispersal of plant pests and diseases on great distances, far away from their center of  origin.

Once localized and relatively benign because of the spatial heterogeneity and the diversity of crops, plant pests and diseases found in the establishment of homogeneous, large-scale crops, an unlimited sphere of activity, and their damages turned into absolute disasters. The tribute paid every year to the rust, the smut, the blight, etc., amounts to hundreds of million.

To face the dramatic loss caused by plant pests and diseases, the most urgent thing is to methodically organize crop protection.
While knowledge of plant diseases is the subject of important research, the relevant documents are, too often, scattered in independent collections and are unknown to the practitioners who should be the first informed in order to scientifically organize protection against new pests and diseases.

Ignoring each other, entomologists, mycologists and practitioners waste a precious time, without significant outcome for the general interest.

The first officers of the society were  prominent  scientists. Its founding father and first President was Louis Mangin (1852-1937), who had been elected in 1904  the first Professor of Cryptogamy at the Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle, an institute he chaired from 1920 to 1931. His masterpiece is the compendium Parasites végétaux des plantes cultivées (1921). The Secretary General was Paul Hariot (1854-1917), a pharmacist in charge of the organization of the crytogamic herbarium at the same institute. The Secretary was Gabriel Arnaud (1882-1987), Head of the Station de Pathologie Végétale in Paris and Professor of Phytopathology at the École Nationale d’Horticulture in Versailles, author, with his wife, of a famous Traité de Pathologie Végétale (1932).

The list of the 30 founding members of the society is also impressive, including, among other celebrities of the time, the botanist Pierre Dangeard (1862-1947) , who discovered the fusion of conjugate nuclei in the ascus ; Édouard Prilllieux (1829-1915), Professor of Botany at the Institut National Agronomique, where he gave the first lecture in phytopathology ; and, last but not least,  Pierre Viala (1859-1936), the saviour of the European vineyards, who identified and brought back from the New World rootstocks resistant to phylloxera.

The issues of the bulletin of the society provide a vivid account of the advances of plant pathology at the time. The society was open to the world;  it had foreign correspondents and even welcomed Erwin Smith (1854-1927), the founder of plant bacteriology, in an extraordinary session held in 1924.

The society changed its name in 1923 for Société de Pathologie Végétale et d’Entomologie Agricole de France ; accordingly the bulletin became the Revue de Pathologie Végétale et Entomologie agricole.  In 1925, and until 1930, production peaked and then remained at a steady rate of 40-45 papers per year, representing a Golden Age for the society.  Within a decade, membership doubled, reaching 180 in 1923.

Then, in 1930,  in direct relationship with the financial crisis of 1929 (as related in the monthly meeting reports that stated people no longer had the money for transportation costs and dues) the production of papers drastically dropped. The publication of the bulletin was stopped in 1939 when the Second World War broke out, eventually ending 25 years of scientific and practical activity related to plant pathology and entomology.

The Société de Pathologie Végétale et d’Entomologie Agricole de France resumed its activity after the lberation, maintaining the publication of the  Revue de Pathologie Végétale et Entomologie agricole until 1962. The scope of the society, however, became, exclusively entomological, so that the society and its bulletin were absorbed by tge Société d’Entomologie de France.
It took another decade for French phytopathologists to organize a new scientific society of their own. The noted mycologist Georges Viennot-Bourgin (1906-1986), Professor at the Institut National Agronomique and author of Les champignons parasites des plantes cultivées (1949), who reigned over French phytopathology for four decades, founded on 12 May 1971 the Société Française de Phytopathologie. The new society was clearly aimed at prolonging the Société de Pathologie Végétale de France. Its scope, however, was restricted to plant diseases, excluding pests. The Société Française de Phytopathologie organized its first national congress in Rennes in 1987 and has been organizing sine then a national congress every four-five years in different French towns (Montpellier, Dijon, Nice, Angers, Toulouse, Lyon, and Paris). Thematic workshop (bacteriology, mycology, virology) are also organized by the society every two years in the enchanting French Alps.

References

Anonymous. 1914. Création de la Société de Pathologie Végétale de France.  Bulletin de la Société de Pathologie Végétale de France 1, 5-9.

Lhoste, J., Ponchet, J. 1994. Histoire de la Phytopathologie et des artisans de son évolution en France. OPIE

 

Board

The Board is the decision-making body of the SFP. It determines the general orientations, the actions to be undertaken and the budget. The members of the Board are elected by the members for three years. Former Presidents of the Society are honorary members of the Board.

 

BAUDIN Maël     Administrator

UMR 1345 IRHS, Université d'Angers, 49045 Angers

mael.baudin@inrae.fr


BUEE Marc      General Secretary

UMR 1136 Interactions Arbres-Micoorganismes (IAM), INRAE, 54280 Champenoux

marc.buee@inrae.fr


CHARON Justine     Administrator

UMR 1332 BFP, INRAE, 33883 Villenave d'Ornon Cedex

justine.charon@inrae.fr


CHOQUER Mathias     Administrator

UMR 5240 MAP, Université Claude Bernard Lyon I, 69622 Villeurbanne

mathias.choquer@univ-lyon1.fr


FERNANDEZ Diana     Honoray member (former President)

UMR 186 Résistance des Plantes aux Bioagresseurs, IRD-UM2-CIRAD, 34394 Montpellier Cedex 5

Diana.Fernandez@ird.fr


FRENDO Pierre      Administrator

UMR 1355 Institut Sophia Agrobiotech, INRAE, 06903 Sophia Antipolis

Pierre.Frendo@unice.fr


FREY Pascal     Honoray member (former President)

UMR 1136 Interactions Arbres Micoorganismes (IAM), INRAE, 54280 Champenoux

pascal.frey@inrae.fr


FUDAL Isabelle      Administrator

UMR 1290 BIOGER, INRAE, 91120 Palaiseau

isabelle.fudal@inrae.fr


GERMAN-RETANA Sylvie     President

UMR 1332 BFP, INRAE, 33883 Villenave d'Ornon Cedex

sylvie.german-retana@inrae.fr


GODIARD Laurence     Administrator

UMR 2594 LIPM, INRAE, 31326 Castanet-Tolosan

laurence.godiard@inrae.fr


HOMMAIS Florence      Administrator

UMR 5240 Microbiologie Adaptation Pathogénie, Université Lyon 1, 69100 Villeurbanne

florence.hommais@univ-lyon1.fr


PETTER Françoise      Administrator

OEPP, 75011 Paris

fp@eppo.int


SACHE Ivan     Honoray member (former President)

UFR Écologie Adaptation Interactions, AgroParisTech, 91120 Palaiseau

Ivan.Sache@Agroparistech.fr


SIAH Ali     Administrator
UMR 1158 BioEcoAgro, Yncréa Hauts-de-France, 59014 Lille

ali.siah@yncrea.fr


SOYER Jessica    Administrator

UMR 1290 BIOGER, INRAE, 91120 Palaiseau

jessica.soyer@inrae.fr


SUFFERT Frédéric     Administrator

UMR 1290 BIOGER, INRAE, 91120 Palaiseau

frederic.suffert@inrae.fr


VENEAULT-FOURREY Claire     Treasurer

UMR 1136 Interactions Arbres Micoorganismes (IAM), INRAE, 54280 Champenoux

Claire.Veneault-Fourrey@inrae.fr


WALKER Anne-Sophie     Administrator

UMR 1290 BIOGER, INRAE, 91120 Palaiseau

anne-sophie.walker@inrae.fr