4.5 Article

Colonization of lettuce cultivars and rotation crops by Fusarium oxysporum f.sp.lactucae, the cause of fusarium wilt of lettuce

Journal

PLANT PATHOLOGY
Volume 63, Issue 3, Pages 548-553

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1111/ppa.12135

Keywords

Lactuca sativa; soilborne disease; cryptic infection

Funding

  1. California Leafy Greens Research Program

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The severity of fusarium wilt is affected by inoculum density in soil, which is expected to decline during intervals when a non-susceptible crop is grown. However, the anticipated benefits of crop rotation may not be realized if the pathogen can colonize and produce inoculum on a resistant cultivar or rotation crop. The present study documented colonization of roots of broccoli, cauliflower and spinach by Fusarium oxysporum f.sp.lactucae, the cause of fusarium wilt of lettuce. The frequency of infection was significantly lower on all three rotation crops than on a susceptible lettuce cultivar, and the pathogen was restricted to the cortex of roots of broccoli. However, F.oxysporum f.sp.lactucae was isolated from the root vascular stele of 7 center dot 4% of cauliflower plants and 50% of spinach plants that were sampled, indicating a greater potential for colonization and production of inoculum on these crops. The pathogen was also recovered from the root vascular stele of five fusarium wilt-resistant lettuce cultivars. Thus, disease-resistant plants may support growth of the pathogen and thereby contribute to an increase in soil inoculum density. Cultivars that were indistinguishable based on above-ground symptoms, differed significantly in the extent to which they were colonized by F.oxysporum f.sp.lactucae. Less extensively colonized cultivars may prove to be superior sources of resistance to fusarium wilt for use in breeding programmes.

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