Fusarium spp. Associated With Root Rot of Pulse Crops and Their Cross-Pathogenicity to Cereal Crops in Montana

Root rot caused by Fusarium species is a major problem in the pulse growing regions of Montana. Fusarium isolates (n = 112) were obtained from seeds and roots of chickpea, dry pea, and lentil. Isolates were identified by comparing the sequences of the internal transcribed spacer region and the trans...

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Détails bibliographiques
Publié dans:Plant disease. - 1997. - 105(2021), 3 vom: 01. März, Seite 548-557
Auteur principal: Moparthi, Swarnalatha (Auteur)
Autres auteurs: Burrows, Mary, Mgbechi-Ezeri, Josephine, Agindotan, Bright
Format: Article en ligne
Langue:English
Publié: 2021
Accès à la collection:Plant disease
Sujets:Journal Article Fusarium root rot Fusarium spp. aggressiveness cereal crops cross-pathogenicity pulse crops small grain cereals
Description
Résumé:Root rot caused by Fusarium species is a major problem in the pulse growing regions of Montana. Fusarium isolates (n = 112) were obtained from seeds and roots of chickpea, dry pea, and lentil. Isolates were identified by comparing the sequences of the internal transcribed spacer region and the translation elongation factor 1-α in Fusarium-ID database. Fusarium avenaceum was the most abundant species (28%), followed by F. acuminatum (21%), F. poae (13%), F. oxysporum (8%), F. culmorum (6%), F. redolens (6%), F. sporotrichioides (6%), F. solani (4%), F. graminearum (2%), F. torulosum (2%), and F. tricinctum (0.9%). The aggressiveness of a subset of 50 isolates that represent various sources of isolation was tested on three pulse crops and two cereal crops. Nonparametric analysis of variance conducted on ranks of disease severity indicated that F. avenaceum and F. solani isolates were highly aggressive on pea and chickpea. In lentil, F. avenaceum and F. culmorum were highly aggressive. In barley, F. avenaceum, F. solani, F. culmorum, and F. graminearum were highly aggressive. In wheat, F. avenaceum, F. graminearum, and F. culmorum were highly aggressive. Two F. avenaceum isolates were highly aggressive across all the crops tested and found to be cross-pathogenic. One isolate of F. culmorum and an isolate of F. graminearum obtained from chickpea and lentil seed were highly aggressive on barley and wheat. The results indicate that multiple Fusarium spp. from seeds and roots can cause root rot on both pulse and cereal crops. Rotating these crops may still lead to an increase in inoculum levels, making crop rotation limited in efficacy as a disease management strategy
Description:Date Completed 30.03.2021
Date Revised 30.03.2021
published: Print-Electronic
Citation Status MEDLINE
ISSN:0191-2917
DOI:10.1094/PDIS-04-20-0800-RE