Carpogenic germinability of diverse Sclerotinia sclerotorium (Lib.) de Bary populations within the south-western Australian grain belt

Sclerotinia stem rot, caused by the necrotrophic plant pathogen Sclerotinia sclerotorium (Lib.) de Bary, is a major disease of canola and pulses in Australia. Current disease management relies greatly on cultural and chemical means of control. Timing of fungicide applications remains a challenge, as...

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Main Authors: Michael, Pippa, Lui, King-Yin, Thomson, Linda, Stefanova, Katia, Bennett, Sarita
Format: Journal Article
Published: American Phytopathological Society 2020
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/80399
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author Michael, Pippa
Lui, King-Yin
Thomson, Linda
Stefanova, Katia
Bennett, Sarita
author_facet Michael, Pippa
Lui, King-Yin
Thomson, Linda
Stefanova, Katia
Bennett, Sarita
author_sort Michael, Pippa
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Sclerotinia stem rot, caused by the necrotrophic plant pathogen Sclerotinia sclerotorium (Lib.) de Bary, is a major disease of canola and pulses in Australia. Current disease management relies greatly on cultural and chemical means of control. Timing of fungicide applications remains a challenge, as efficacy is dependent on accurate prediction of ascospore release and presence on the plant. The aims of this study were to determine the optimal temperature for carpogenic germination of S. sclerotorium populations sampled from canola and lupin fields in south-western Australia and characterise diversity using mycelial compatibility groupings (MCGs). Sclerotia were collected from four diseased canola and one diseased lupin field from across south-western Australia. Forty sclerotia from each population were incubated at four alternating temperatures of 30/15°C, 20/15°C, 20/4°C and 15/4°C (12/12 hourly light/dark cycle) and assessed every 2-3 days for a 180-day period. MCG groupings for populations were characterised using 12 reference isolates. Results indicated the time to initial carpogenic germination decreased as diurnal temperature fluctuations decreased, with a fluctuation of 5°C (20/15°C) having the most rapid initial germination followed by 11°C (15/4°C) followed by 16°C (20/4°C). Optimal germination temperature for all five populations was 20/15°C, however population responses to other diurnal temperature regimes varied considerably. No germination was observed at 30/15°C. MCG results indicate extensive diversity within and between populations, with at least 40% of sclerotes within each population unable to be characterised. We suggest that this diversity has enabled S. sclerotorium populations to adapt to varying environmental conditions within south-western Australia.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-803992020-10-12T03:27:38Z Carpogenic germinability of diverse Sclerotinia sclerotorium (Lib.) de Bary populations within the south-western Australian grain belt Michael, Pippa Lui, King-Yin Thomson, Linda Stefanova, Katia Bennett, Sarita Sclerotinia stem rot, caused by the necrotrophic plant pathogen Sclerotinia sclerotorium (Lib.) de Bary, is a major disease of canola and pulses in Australia. Current disease management relies greatly on cultural and chemical means of control. Timing of fungicide applications remains a challenge, as efficacy is dependent on accurate prediction of ascospore release and presence on the plant. The aims of this study were to determine the optimal temperature for carpogenic germination of S. sclerotorium populations sampled from canola and lupin fields in south-western Australia and characterise diversity using mycelial compatibility groupings (MCGs). Sclerotia were collected from four diseased canola and one diseased lupin field from across south-western Australia. Forty sclerotia from each population were incubated at four alternating temperatures of 30/15°C, 20/15°C, 20/4°C and 15/4°C (12/12 hourly light/dark cycle) and assessed every 2-3 days for a 180-day period. MCG groupings for populations were characterised using 12 reference isolates. Results indicated the time to initial carpogenic germination decreased as diurnal temperature fluctuations decreased, with a fluctuation of 5°C (20/15°C) having the most rapid initial germination followed by 11°C (15/4°C) followed by 16°C (20/4°C). Optimal germination temperature for all five populations was 20/15°C, however population responses to other diurnal temperature regimes varied considerably. No germination was observed at 30/15°C. MCG results indicate extensive diversity within and between populations, with at least 40% of sclerotes within each population unable to be characterised. We suggest that this diversity has enabled S. sclerotorium populations to adapt to varying environmental conditions within south-western Australia. 2020 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/80399 10.1094/PDIS-12-19-2575-RE American Phytopathological Society restricted
spellingShingle Michael, Pippa
Lui, King-Yin
Thomson, Linda
Stefanova, Katia
Bennett, Sarita
Carpogenic germinability of diverse Sclerotinia sclerotorium (Lib.) de Bary populations within the south-western Australian grain belt
title Carpogenic germinability of diverse Sclerotinia sclerotorium (Lib.) de Bary populations within the south-western Australian grain belt
title_full Carpogenic germinability of diverse Sclerotinia sclerotorium (Lib.) de Bary populations within the south-western Australian grain belt
title_fullStr Carpogenic germinability of diverse Sclerotinia sclerotorium (Lib.) de Bary populations within the south-western Australian grain belt
title_full_unstemmed Carpogenic germinability of diverse Sclerotinia sclerotorium (Lib.) de Bary populations within the south-western Australian grain belt
title_short Carpogenic germinability of diverse Sclerotinia sclerotorium (Lib.) de Bary populations within the south-western Australian grain belt
title_sort carpogenic germinability of diverse sclerotinia sclerotorium (lib.) de bary populations within the south-western australian grain belt
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/80399