3 research outputs found

    Characterization of the stemphylium blight pathogens and their effect on lentil yield

    Get PDF
    The disease stemphylium blight has become common in lentil fields in Saskatchewan, but the effect of this disease on developing lentil plants, has not been studied under field conditions. Even though Stemphylium botryosum is suspected to be the pathogen causing stemphylium blight in lentil around the world, there is no confirmation of the pathogenic species involved in stemphylium blight of lentil in Saskatchewan. The objectives of this study were to determine the effect on lentil seed quantity and quality of S. botryosum infection at the seedling, the early-flowering, the mid-flowering or the podding stages, and to characterize the pathogen or pathogens causing stemphylium blight in Saskatchewan lentil fields. Three field experiments were conducted over two years using green polyethylene low tunnels to create conducive environments and control the timing of infection. Cumulative disease severity, measured as area under the disease progress curve, in lentil treatments inoculated at the seedling stage was higher compared to treatments inoculated at later growth stages or to uninoculated control treatments, in which some stemphylium blight developed due to natural inoculum. Neither the amount of harvested seed, nor seed weight or seed size were reduced compared to the uninoculated control, even though disease severity was higher in inoculated versus uninoculated treatments. Seed infection levels of 2.6 to 3.4% in seed harvested from treatments that were inoculated at the seedling, early and mid-flower stages were significantly higher than those observed in seeds from uninoculated control treatments (0.6%) or from treatments inoculated at podding (1.2%). Field isolates of Stemphylium spp. were compared to the ex-type isolate by morphology, and additionally to sequence data of five Stemphylium spp. and one Alternaria sp. obtained from GenBank by molecular phylogenetic analyses of the internal transcribe spacer (ITS) and the glyceraldehyde 3 – phosphate dehydrogenase (gpd) gene regions. Morphology of colony and conidia were not informative since features overlapped except for three isolates. Results of the molecular phylogenetic analyses revealed that S. botryosum is one of two possible Stemphylium spp. involved in the development of stemphylium blight in lentil. The three isolates with different morphology were also consistently clustered as a species distinct from the Stemphylium species. Although yield loss could not be demonstrated here, further studies on the epidemiology of the pathogens causing stemphylium blight in Saskatchewan lentil fields are warranted in view of the fact that more than one candidate species was identified as the causal agent

    Characterization of Aphanomyces euteiches pathotypes infecting peas in Western Canada

    Get PDF
    Saskatchewan Pulse GrowersPeer ReviewedAphanomyces root rot, caused by the soil-borne oomycete Aphanomyces euteiches Drechs., has developed into a serious disease in the pea and lentil-producing areas of the Great Plains of North America. Based on six pea differentials previously used to differentiate 11 pathotypes in France, pathotypes were identified among field isolates from Saskatchewan (14) and Alberta (18). Four isolates from the USA and standard isolates for pathotypes I and III designated in the French study were also included. Each isolate was tested twice in replicated experiments by inoculating French pea differentials Baccara, Capella, MN 313, 902131, 552 and PI 80693, along with the Canadian susceptible pea cultivar CDC Meadow and partially resistant USDA line PI 660736 under controlled conditions. Pea plants grown in vermiculite were inoculated 10 days after seeding by pipetting 5 mL of a suspension containing 1 x 103 zoospores mL-1 to the base of each plant. Root discoloration was scored 10 days post-inoculation using a 0-5 scale. Testing revealed that 38 of the isolates, including standard pathotype I isolate RB84 belonged to pathotype I, 4 isolates including standard pathotype III isolate Ae109 were pathotype III, and USA isolate Ae16-01 was a pathotype II isolate. An alfalfa isolate from Quebec was avirulent on all pea genotypes. These findings indicate that pathotype type I is predominant on the Canadian prairies

    Aetiology of stemphylium blight on lentil in Canada

    No full text
    <p>Field isolates of <i>Stemphylium</i> spp. collected from lentil and nine other western Canadian crops were compared to the ex-type isolate of <i>Stemphylium botryosum</i> by morphology and by molecular phylogenetic analysis based on the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) and the <i>glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase</i> gene regions. Sequence data of these genes for six other <i>Stemphylium</i> spp. obtained from GenBank were also included in the phylogenetic analysis. Morphology of colonies and morphometry of conidia agreed with previous descriptions of <i>S. botryosum</i>, but did not correlate with the clustering observed in the phylogenetic analysis. Sequence data revealed that <i>S. botryosum</i> is one of probably two <i>Stemphylium</i> spp. involved in the development of stemphylium blight on Canadian lentil, and is associated with other hosts such as faba bean, soybean, bean, pea, alfalfa, coriander, caraway and fenugreek. More than one validly described <i>Stemphylium</i> sp. was associated with the second cluster of isolates causing stemphylium blight, indicating that an extensive taxonomic review of the genus <i>Stemphylium</i> is required before this second stemphylium blight pathogen can be identified by name.</p
    corecore