CSIRO Publishing Home Books & CDs Journals About Us Shopping Cart
Australasian Plant Pathology
  Research in all branches of plant pathology
You are here: Journals > Australasian Plant Pathology   
Search
 
 
  Advanced Search
   
Journal Home
General Information
Scope
Editorial Board
Editorial Contact
Print Publication Dates
Online Content
For Authors
For Referees
How to Order

 Most Read
Visit our Most Read page regularly to keep up-to-date with the most downloaded papers in this journal.

 Early Alert
Subscribe to our email Early Alert or RSS feeds for the latest journal papers.

 

Susceptibility of potato (Solanum tuberosum) cultivars to powdery scab (caused by Spongospora subterranea f. sp. subterranea), and relationships between tuber and root infection

Richard E. Falloon, Russell A. Genet, Andrew R. Wallace and Ruth C. Butler

Abstract

Ninety-nine potato (Solanum tuberosum) cultivars and 13 breeding lines were assessed in field trials for susceptibility to powdery scab (caused by Spongospora subterranea f. sp. subterranea). The trials were carried out over 11 growing seasons (each cultivar/line tested in at least two growing seasons) in soil inoculated with S. subterranea and regularly irrigated during crop growth. The cultivars and lines were categorised as 'very resistant' (21%), 'moderately resistant' (28%), 'moderately susceptible' (33%) or 'very susceptible' (19%). Scaled average severity scores for the cultivars and lines followed a continuum between very resistant and very susceptible, suggesting that resistance to powdery scab is quantitative. In a glasshouse experiment where small plants were inoculated with S. subterranea sporosori, 15 cultivars selected to cover the spectrum of field-assessed susceptibility were assessed for intensity of infection by S. subterranea zoosporangium in roots and for numbers of root galls on root systems. All of the cultivars developed zoosporangia and root galls (i.e. no cultivar was immune from infection), and root infection was usually related to tuber infection. Field-resistant cultivars (tuber infection) generally had low numbers of root zoosporangia and root galls in the glasshouse experiment, and cultivars that were very susceptible to tuber infection in the field had high levels of root infection in the glasshouse experiment. An exception was the early maturing cv. Swift, which had very low levels of tuber infection in the field, but had high numbers of root zoosporangia and root galls in the glasshouse. These results demonstrate the relative reaction of a large number of potato cultivars to powdery scab and reaffirm the potential for using plant resistance as a powdery scab management strategy. Development of S. subterranea in host roots, even in cultivars with resistance to tuber infection, is likely to be important in the epidemiology of powdery scab.

Keywords: tuber lesions, root galls, zoosporangia.

Australasian Plant Pathology 32(3) 377 - 385 (2003) doi:10.1071/AP03040

  
Subscriber Login
Username:
Password:  

 View
Issue Contents
PDF (364 KB) $25
Export Citation
Cited by
 Tools
Print
Email this page
    


 
Top  Email this page
 


Legal & Privacy | Sitemap | Contact Us | Help

CSIRO

© CSIRO 1996-2010