World | wheat Fungus Poised to Kill Off World's Wheat US scientists race to find plants resistant to the Ug99 fungus By Katherine Thompson Posted Jun 14, 2009 6:02 PM CDT Copied Palestinian farmer, Hhmed Al-Rayan, 63, harvests wheat on a field in the West Bank village of Beit Nuba on the outskirts of Ramallah, Saturday, May. 30. 2009. (AP Photo/Muhammed Muheisen) A rust-colored fungus could destroy 80% of the world's wheat crops in a few years unless scientists counter it with genetically resistant strains, the Los Angeles Times reports. The Ug99 fungus—an ancient wheat-killer that rose up again in Africa 10 years ago—is already threatening 19% of the world's wheat and becoming more virulent as it spreads. "It's a time bomb," one analyst said. Scientists are breeding Ug99-resistant wheat that will take 9 to 12 years to incorporate into breeding techniques—while the fungus, which is air-borne, can simply ride to other countries on the clothes of an airline passenger. Experts say it is poised to enter India and Pakistan, then China and Russia. North America can't be far off. "A significant humanitarian crisis is inevitable," said one researcher. Read These Next North Carolina shooting suspect once walked the red carpet. The gunman who killed 4 at a Michigan church was an ex-marine. Multiple people have been shot at a Mormon church in Michigan. 'We heard a big bang,' says churchgoer in Michigan Report an error