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Cultivar‐specific effects of pathogen testing on storage root yield of sweetpotato,Ipomoea batatas
Authors:T Okpul  J Maltby  E Guaf  EA Coleman  S Dennien  RM Harding  MJ Dieters  ID Godwin
Institution:1. School of Land, Crop and Food Sciences, The University of Queensland, St. Lucia, QLD, Australia;2. Bundaberg Research Station, Queensland Primary Industry and Fisheries, DEEDI, Bundaberg, QLD, Australia;3. Sir Alkan Tololo Research Centre, NARI, Lae 411, Morobe Province, Papua New Guinea;4. Rockhampton Research Station, Queensland Primary Industry and Fisheries, DEEDI, Rockhampton, QLD, Australia;5. Gatton Research Station, Queensland Primary Industry and Fisheries, DEEDI, Gatton, QLD, Australia;6. Centre for Tropical Crops and Biocommodities, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, QLD, Australia
Abstract:The accumulation and perpetuation of viral pathogens over generations of clonal propagation in crop species such as sweetpotato, Ipomoea batatas, inevitably result in a reduction in crop yield and quality. This study was conducted at Bundaberg, Australia to compare the productivity of field‐derived and pathogen‐tested (PT) clones of 14 sweetpotato cultivars and the yield benefits of using healthy planting materials. The field‐derived clonal materials were exposed to the endemic viruses, while the PT clones were subjected to thermotherapy and meristem‐tip culture to eliminate viral pathogens. The plants were indexed for viruses using nitrocellulose membrane‐enzyme‐linked immunosorbent assay and graft‐inoculations onto Ipomoea setosa. A net benefit of 38% in storage root yield was realised from using PT materials in this study. Conversely, in a similar study previously conducted at Kerevat, Papua New Guinea (PNG), a net deficit of 36% was realised. This reinforced our finding that the response to pathogen testing was cultivar dependent and that the PNG cultivars in these studies generally exhibited increased tolerance to the endemic viruses present at the respective trial sites as manifested in their lack of response from the use of PT clones. They may be useful sources for future resistance breeding efforts. Nonetheless, the potential economic gain from using PT stocks necessitates the use of pathogen testing on virus‐susceptible commercial cultivars.
Keywords:Cultivar decline  NCM‐ELISA  pathogen testing  sweetpotato viruses
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