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Title: Susceptibility to Phytophthora ramorum and Inoculum Production Potential of Some Common Eastern Forest Understory Plant Species.
Authors: Tooley, Paul W.
Browning, Marsha
USDA, ARS
Source: Plant disease: an international journal of applied plant pathology. 2009 Mar., v. 93, no. 3, p. 249-256.
NALT Subjects: temperate forests
understory
species diversity
species differences
Phytophthora ramorum
plant pathogenic fungi
fungal diseases of plants
disease resistance
host range
sporulation
sporangia
chlamydospores
host plants
seedlings
disease incidence
leaf area
disease severity
lesions (plant)
woody plants
forbs
alternative hosts
disease transmission
air temperature
relative humidity
Eastern United States
Issue Date: Mar-2009
Abstract: Twenty-five plant species (21 genera, 14 families), which comprise a portion of the understory in forests of the Eastern United States, were evaluated for susceptibility to infection by Phytophthora ramorum. The degree to which P. ramorum is able to form sporangia and chlamydospores was also assessed on these hosts. Seedlings were spray-inoculated with a mixture (4,000 sporangia/ml) of four P. ramorum isolates followed by incubation in a dew chamber at 20°C in darkness for 5 days. Percent infection on individual leaves/leaflets was assessed visually. Mean percent leaf area infected ranged from 0.7% for Smilax rotundifolia to 93.8% for Kalmia latifolia. Eight plant species tested developed significantly larger lesion areas than those found on susceptible control Rhododendron 'Cunningham's White'. Fourteen species in addition to the susceptible control exhibited infection of over 90% of their leaves. Sporangia production by P. ramorum varied considerably among plant species, ranging from 36 per cm2 lesion area on Myrica pennsylvannica to 2,001 per cm2 lesion area on Robinia pseudoacacia. Numbers of chlamydospores produced per 6-mm-diameter leaf disk incubated in a P. ramorum sporangia suspension ranged from 25 on Ilex verticillata to 493 on Rhus typhina. The results indicate that many common understory species in Eastern U.S. forests are susceptible to P. ramorum and capable of providing ample sources of inoculum (sporangia and chlamydospores) for forest epidemics should the pathogen be introduced and should temperature and moisture conditions exist that are conducive to disease development.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10113/30705
Appears in Collections:USDA Research and Information

Files in This Item:

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IND44200673.pdf183KbAdobe PDFView/Open

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