Assessment of barriers to prevent the development of potato tuber blight caused by Phytophthora infestans

被引:9
|
作者
Glass, JR [1 ]
Johnson, KB [1 ]
Powelson, ML [1 ]
机构
[1] Oregon State Univ, Dept Bot & Plant Pathol, Corvallis, OR 97331 USA
关键词
plant disease control;
D O I
10.1094/PDIS.2001.85.5.521
中图分类号
Q94 [植物学];
学科分类号
071001 ;
摘要
Experiments were conducted in an irrigated, sandy loam soil to evaluate mulches and hill sizes as barriers to prevent the development of potato tuber blight caused by Phytophthora infestans. In mulching experiments, five treatments were applied to field plots of cv. Red LaSoda: 1, no mulch; 2, polyurethane spray foam in an 8-cm-diameter area immediately surrounding the plant stem; 3, black polyethylene film over the entire hill except near the stem; 4, a combination of treatments 2 and 3; and 5, a water-permeable, agricultural textile treated with copper hydroxide applied over the same hill area as in treatment 3. In 1998, the incidence of tuber blight in plots mulched with black film (treatments 3 and 4) averaged 32% compared with 56% in plots without this mulch (treatments I and 2). In 1999, incidence of tuber blight in plots with and without black film averaged 9 and 20%, respectively. Mulching the stem area with spray foam (treatments 2 and 3) did not reduce the incidence of blighted tubers when compared with the appropriate control. The copper-treated textile mulch (treatment 5) provided reductions in the incidence of tuber blight similar to those observed with the use of black polyethylene film. In a hill size experiment conducted once in 1998 and twice in 1999, three hill size treatments were established on cvs. Red LaSoda, Shepody, and Russet Burbank. Red LaSoda was the most susceptible and Russet Burbank the least susceptible to tuber blight. Comparison of blight incidence in tubers classified by depth in the hill revealed few differences among the hill size treatments, although over all treatments, tubers covered with more than 15 cm of soil had a lower incidence of blight (1 to 14%) than tubers with less soil cover (13 to 59%). Most tuber infections were apparently initiated in eyes and were not concentrated on a portion of the tuber such as the stolen (proximal) or distal end. The fact that black film and textile mulches reduced tuber infection indicates that inoculum of P. infestans can move from foliage to tubers through soil and that inoculum movement is not limited to large channels in the hill such as those created by the potato stems. The mulch treatments, however, provided only partial protection of tubers, limiting the practicality of such treatments to commercial producers. Hill size treatments had little effect on tuber blight incidence, indicating that adequate suppression of tuber infection in an environment conducive to late blight may be inseparably linked to adequate suppression of the foliar phase.
引用
收藏
页码:521 / 528
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Analyzing the role of constitutive XEGIP expression on limiting potato late blight, caused by Phytophthora infestans
    Jones, R.
    [J]. PHYTOPATHOLOGY, 2014, 104 (11) : 56 - 56
  • [32] RELATIONSHIP OF POTATO LEAF STEROLS TO DEVELOPMENT OF POTATO LATE BLIGHT CAUSED BY PHYTOPHTHORA-INFESTANS ON UNITED-STATES POTATO CLONES AND BREEDING LINES
    HAZEL, WJ
    BEAN, GA
    GOTH, RW
    [J]. PLANT DISEASE, 1988, 72 (03) : 203 - 205
  • [33] RNA-seq analysis of potato tuber transcriptome dynamics in response to the late blight pathogen Phytophthora infestans
    Gao, L.
    Tu, Z.
    Katagiri, F.
    Bradeen, J. M.
    [J]. PHYTOPATHOLOGY, 2011, 101 (06) : S58 - S58
  • [34] A GLASSHOUSE PROGENY TEST FOR RESISTANCE TO TUBER BLIGHT (PHYTOPHTHORA-INFESTANS)
    WASTIE, RL
    CALIGARI, PDS
    STEWART, HE
    MACKAY, GR
    [J]. POTATO RESEARCH, 1987, 30 (04) : 533 - 538
  • [35] SOURCES OF POTATO BLIGHT (PHYTOPHTHORA-INFESTANS) IN EAST OF SCOTLAND
    BOYD, AEW
    [J]. PLANT PATHOLOGY, 1974, 23 (01) : 30 - 36
  • [36] A foliar blight and tuber rot of potato caused by Phytophthora nicotianae:: New occurrences and characterization of isolates
    Taylor, Raymond J.
    Pasche, Julie S.
    Gallup, Courtney A.
    Shew, H. David
    Gudmestad, Neil C.
    [J]. PLANT DISEASE, 2008, 92 (04) : 492 - 503
  • [37] Early manifestations of potato blight (Phytophthora infestans De Bary)
    Alcock, NL
    McIntosh, AES
    [J]. ANNALS OF APPLIED BIOLOGY, 1927, 14 (04) : 440 - 441
  • [38] INTRARACIAL VARIATION IN PHYTOPHTHORA INFESTANS AND FIELD RESISTANCE TO POTATO BLIGHT
    JEFFREY, SIB
    GRINDLE, M
    JINKS, JL
    [J]. GENETICA, 1962, 32 (04) : 323 - &
  • [39] LATE BLIGHT OF POTATO PHYTOPHTHORA-INFESTANS (MONT) BARY
    KADAM, VC
    SARODE, MS
    BENDRE, NJ
    SHINGTE, VV
    HUKERI, SB
    KHOT, BB
    LOKHANDE, SB
    [J]. CURRENT SCIENCE, 1974, 43 (08): : 259 - 260
  • [40] Foliar and tuber assessment of late blight (Phytophthora infestans (Mont.) de Bary) reaction in cultivated potato (Solanum tuberosum L.)
    D. S. Douches
    W. W. Kirk
    M. A. Bertram
    J. J. Coombs
    B. A. Niemira
    [J]. Potato Research, 2002, 45 : 215 - 224