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 Australasian Plant Disease Notes
Disease notes, new records and quarantine interception reports are published in Australasian Plant Disease Notes.

 

Article << Previous     |     Next >>   Contents Vol 36(4)

Flower colour is associated with susceptibility to disease in the legume Swainsona formosa

N. Panjehkeh A C, D. Backhouse B D, A. Taji A

A School of Rural Science and Agriculture, University of New England, Armidale, NSW 2351, Australia.
B School of Environmental Sciences and Natural Resources Management, University of New England, Armidale, NSW 2351, Australia.
C Present address: Zabol University, Zabol, Sistan and Baluchestan, Iran.
D Corresponding author. Email: dbackhou@une.edu.au
 
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Abstract

The hypothesis that plants of the ornamental Australian native legume Swainsona formosa (Sturt’s desert pea) with reduced flower pigmentation are more susceptible to soilborne diseases was investigated using red, pink and white-flowered lines challenged with Phytophthora cinnamomi. Inoculations of roots, hypocotyls and detached stems showed that the red line was completely resistant, the white line highly susceptible, and the pink line intermediate in reaction. Similar results were obtained for root and detached stem assays using Pythium irregulare and Fusarium solani isolated from diseased white-flowered plants, but all lines were equally susceptible to Botrytis cinerea in detached stem assays. Crosses between the red and white lines showed that white flowers and susceptibility to P. cinnamomi were each determined by recessive alleles at single loci, which segregated together.

   
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