4.7 Article

The role of stress factors in severity of Cytospora plurivora in greenhouse and field plantings of 13 peach (Prunus persica) cultivars

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FRONTIERS IN PLANT SCIENCE
卷 14, 期 -, 页码 -

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FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2023.1228493

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Cytospora; drought; salinity; canker pathogen; fruit crop; peach

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Understanding the interactions between host, pathogen, and the environment is crucial for disease management and improving crop yields. Abiotic stress factors, such as cold damage, water deficit, and high pH soils, can significantly impact fruit tree production and disease severity. This research focused on evaluating the effects of biotic and abiotic stress factors on peach tree health, specifically in relation to Cytospora canker. The findings emphasize the importance of proper irrigation and soil pH management in peach orchards for effective disease control.
Understanding the host-pathogen-environmental interactions in a pathosystem is essential for management of diseases and diminished crop yields. Abiotic stressors such as cold damage, water deficit, and high pH soils can be major limiting factors to tree fruit production. Along with decreased yields, these abiotic factors can have direct implications for disease severity within orchards. Cytospora plurivora is a ubiquitous fungal canker pathogen in western Colorado, USA and is a major focus in integrated pest management strategies. This research evaluated the influence of biotic and abiotic stress factors on peach tree health. Thirteen peach cultivars were placed under abiotic stress and inoculated with C. plurivora in greenhouse and field conditions. Under deficit irrigation, C. plurivora infections were significantly larger and more severe in both the greenhouse and field trials when compared with those under the full-irrigation controls. In controlled greenhouse conditions, a positive correlation between lesion size and water potential was evident, but no trend of cultivar tolerance was observed. Furthermore, increase in irrigation water pH, through additions of sodium carbonate and bicarbonate, in the greenhouse trials resulted in decreased leaf water potentials and increased pathogen necrotic tissue volumes (mm3). In field trials, there was no positive relationship between lesion size and water potential; trees with the most negative water potentials had the smallest lesions sizes that did not correspond to cultivar, suggesting that other abiotic or biotic factors may be shielding water stressed trees from increased pathogen aggression. This research highlights the importance of proper irrigation and soil pH management as tools for the management of Cytospora canker in peach orchards.

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