期刊
AGRONOMY-BASEL
卷 13, 期 5, 页码 -出版社
MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/agronomy13051204
关键词
biological control; catenated conidia; conidiophores; Cucumis melo; electrostatic field; electrostatic spore collector; mycoparasites; pycnidium formation
This study evaluated the effectiveness of hyperparasitic fungi in controlling powdery mildew. In a greenhouse, we spray-inoculated colonies of the melon PM-causing fungus with spores of the hyperparasitic fungus Ampelomyces sp. We collected and counted the conidia produced by the PM colonies and found that the hyperparasitic fungus suppressed the release of conidia. This study is the first to use electrostatic and digital microscopic techniques to assess the impact of fungal hyperparasitism on mycohost survival and quantitatively evaluate the suppression of conidial release from infected PM colonies.
In this study, we evaluated the effectiveness of hyperparasitic fungi in controlling powdery mildew (PM). In a greenhouse, we spray-inoculated single colonies of the melon PM-causing fungus Podosphaera xanthii strain KMP-6N at three different fungal developmental stages (i.e., 5, 10, and 15 days old) with spores of the hyperparasitic fungus Ampelomyces sp. strain Xs-q. After spray inoculation, we collected and counted KMP-6N conidia produced as asexual progeny from PM colonies using an electrostatic rotational spore collector. Collector insulator films were replaced at 24 h intervals until KMP-6N ceased to release additional progeny conidia. Conidial releases from each of the single Xs-q-inoculated KMP-6N colonies gradually reduced, then stopped within ca. 4 and 8 days of the first treatment in 5- and 10-day-old KMP-6N colonies, and within ca. 20 days of the second spray treatment in 15-day-old KMP-6N colonies, respectively. The total numbers of asexual progeny conidia collected from single 5-, 10-, and 15-day-old colonies were ca. 156, 1167, and 44,866, respectively. After electrostatic spore collection, conidiophores in Xs-q-uninoculated KMP-6N colonies appeared normal, whereas almost all conidiophores in 5- and 10-day-old Xs-q-inoculated KMP-6N colonies were completely deformed or collapsed due to the infection of the hyperparasitic fungus. This is the first study to apply electrostatic and digital microscopic techniques to clarify the impact of fungal hyperparasitism on mycohost survival, and, in particular, to assess quantitatively and visually the suppression of conidial release from any PM colonies infected with Ampelomyces.
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