4.5 Article

Sanitation of olive plants infected by Verticillium dahliae using heat treatments

Journal

PLANT PATHOLOGY
Volume 65, Issue 3, Pages 412-421

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ppa.12432

Keywords

hot water treatment; nursery stocks; thermotherapy

Funding

  1. Spanish Ministry of Education and Science - European Union FEDER Funds [AGL2004-7495]
  2. Andalusian Regional Government [P08-AGR-03635]
  3. Talent Hub fellowship - European Union
  4. Marie Sklodowska-Curie actions (COFUND-Grant) [291780]
  5. Junta de Andalucia
  6. Agrifood Campus of International Excellence CeiA3

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Verticillium wilt, caused by the fungus Verticillium dahliae, is currently the most important disease affecting olive in the Mediterranean basin. There are no effective treatments for controlling this disease. The use of infected nursery stocks has largely contributed to the spread of the pathogen, and therefore the development of treatments to preventively sanitize the propagation stock is critical in the nursery industry. This study describes novel techniques to achieve this aim. The effects of several temperature-exposure time combinations were evaluated: (i) the survival of pathogen on culture medium (PDA); (ii) the pathogen viability on infected shoots and plants; (iii) the vegetative growth of plants of several cultivars; and (iv) the rooting ability of cuttings. The colonies of the pathogen growing in PDA were killed after 8h and 60min of exposure at 40 and 47 degrees C, respectively. Temperatures 42 degrees C for at least 2h were lethal for the pathogen infecting the shoots. Likewise, moist hot air treatments at 42-44 degrees C for 6-12h eradicated the pathogen, without compromising the viability of the plants. Five olive cultivars were also evaluated and classified according to their thermotolerance as follows: sensitive (Chiquitita), moderately sensitive (Koroneiki, Frantoio and Picual) and heat tolerant (Arbequina). However, the optimized sanitation methods were applicable to all of the cultivars. Finally, heat treatments were applied to unrooted cuttings, which severely affected their rooting ability. Thus, this study developed a hot air treatment to produce V.dahliae-free olive nursery plants.

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