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1.
Experiments were done with the aim of developing a reliable method for assessing the susceptibility of potato cultivars to blackleg caused by Erwinia carotovora subsp. atroseptica, in the field. Over four years seed tubers were either stab-inoculated at the heel-end prior to planting, vacuum infiltrated with bacteria just after harvest or vacuum infiltrated prior to sprouting and after ‘cutting’ or ‘pricking’. Stab inoculation produced fewer diseased plants but generally a greater range of symptoms than vacuum infiltration. Vacuum infiltrated ‘cut’ seed gave most disease whereas infiltration at harvest and infiltration of ‘pricked’ seed gave similar disease incidence. The cultivar Maris Piper was more resistant than Desiree in 1981 and 1982, and Pentland Javelin than Ulster Sceptre in 1983 and 1984, largely irrespective of the inoculation treatment. Irrigation improved yields but did not affect disease symptoms. In further field experiments over three years, each with a minimum of 20 cultivars, seed tubers were sliced just before planting at a standard distance from the apex and inoculated by applying a pad impregnated with inoculum. Differences were shown between cultivars and it is suggested that the method could be adapted for testing for blackleg susceptibility under controlled environment conditions.  相似文献   

2.
In field experiments in 1981 and 1982, uninoculated seed tubers (cv. Désirée) and those inoculated with Erwinia carotovora subsp. atroseptica at the rose (apical) or heel (stolon attachment) ends were planted at normal (35 cm) or double spacing; in additional plots, inoculated and uninoculated tubers were planted alternately. Inoculation, especially at the rose end, decreased plant height and sometimes resulted in blackleg symptoms. Individual plant yields were recorded at the end of the season. In plots of uniform seed type at normal spacing, inoculation decreased total yield compared with uninoculated by 12–13% (heel-end inoculation) or 26–40% (rose-end inoculation). At double spacing, yields increased compared with normal spacing by 44–58% (uninoculated or heel-end inoculation) or 30–39% (rose-end inoculation). When rose-end-inoculated and uninoculated seed tubers were planted alternately, inoculated plants yielded less and uninoculated plants more than in plots planted throughout with the same seed treatment. The abilities of inoculated and uninoculated plants to compensate for weak or missing neighbours were combined using equations to predict the yields of crops with different proportions of diseased or missing plants.  相似文献   

3.
The effect of planting seed tubers inoculated either near the stolon attachment (heel end), among the eyes at the apex (rose end) or mid-way along the tuber with Erwinia carotovora subsp. atroseptica, was assessed in terms of growth of the plant, disease symptoms and yield. Invariably rose-end inoculation had the greatest and heel-end the least effect in decreasing yield when compared with uninoculated plants. Cultivars Majestic and King Edward were the most susceptible, Pentland Crown showed some resistance to invasion of stems (blackleg) although plant vigour, expressed in terms of plant height and stem number was affected and Maris Piper was the most resistant.  相似文献   

4.
Infection of potato tubers with soft rot bacteria   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Stolons attached to developing potato tubers were inoculated with the soft rot bacterium Erwinia carotovora var. atroseptica. Almost all the stolons rotted, but soft rots developed in less than 10% of new tubers; the bacterium was isolated later from these tubers. No rots developed in the other tubers but the bacterium was later isolated from about half of them. It could not be isolated from tubers attached to inoculated stolons where the rot on them did not extend to the tuber or from tubers attached to stolons that were not inoculated though many of these rotted. The bacterium was reisolated from almost all arrested lesions in tubers inoculated 8 month earlier with E. carotovora var. atroseptica. Blackleg did not develop from plants grown fom these tubers under various soil conditions. It did develop in a large proportion of plants from tubers inoculated shortly before planting and grown in cool, wet soil. Less than 1% blackleg developed in plants grown from tubers from plants with blackleg or from plants immediately adjacent. The presence of pectolytic bacteria and E. caratovora var. atroseptica in seed and new tubers was investigated during June, July and August. Although E. caratovora var. atroseptica was obtained from c. 40% tubers, only c. 0·3% of c. 8400 plants developed blackleg. The bacterium was isolated from only three of 160 new tubers sampled during the summer.  相似文献   

5.
Stem canker (Rhizoctonia solani) of maincrop potatoes.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
In two years, potato plants were sampled at 1- or 2- weekly intervals from plots planted with seed tubers bearing sclerotia of Rhizoctonia solani (black scurf) and with seed without sclerotia either infested or not with cultures of R. solani at planting. Sprouted King Edward seed was used in 1981 and sprouted and non-sprouted King Edward and Pentland Crown seed in 1982. In both years 60–80% of shoots from seed with sclerotia and 90% of shoots from seed inoculated at planting were affected with stem canker. Most disease developed before shoots emerged although it gradually increased later when new shoots arising both from seed tubers or as branches on shoots with damaged apices (pruned shoots) became infected before they emerged. Sprouting seed tubers bearing sclerotia decreased the disease on both cultivars but with soil-applied inoculum the disease was more severe on plants from sprouted than non-sprouted seed. Some stolons were infected by R. solani soon after they developed and incidence of infection later increased. Thirty to 50% of stolons were infected on plants from infected seed tubers and 60% on plants with soil-applied inoculum. With both cultivars and sources of inoculum about 70% of the infected stolons had their apices killed (pruned).  相似文献   

6.
In 1983 and 1984, potato seed tubers of five early and seven maincrop cultivars were inoculated with cultures of Rhizoctonia soluni during planting to simulate severe seed infection. Shoot and stolon infection was assessed in June-August and black scurf on tubers recorded after harvest in October. Almost all shoots of all cultivars had stem canker in both years and disease on shoots, stolons and tubers was more severe in 1984 than in 1983. In 1983 similar amounts of disease developed on all early cultivars and between 11% (Ulster Sceptre) and 32% (Maris Peer) shoots were pruned off. Maris Peer had a stem canker score lower than other cultivars in 1984 but more than half the shoots were pruned off. Shoot pruning on Estima, Ulster Prince and Ulster Sceptre was more common on plants from sprouted than non-sprouted seed. Between 30 and 50% of stolons were pruned off. After harvest in 1985, black scurf was least prevalent on Arran Comet and Maris Peer tubers and in 1984 on Arran Comet and Estima tubers from non-sprouted seed. Of the maincrop cultivars, King Edward plants from sprouted seed had many shoots pruned off in both years. Shoot pruning was also prevalent on Maris Piper and Pentland Squire plants from non-sprouted seed. Record had fewest pruned shoots and stolons and the lowest stem canker score. The disease was more severe on Pentland Crown and Maris Piper plants from non-sprouted than sprouted seed. Black scurf was most common on Cara and King Edward tubers in 1983 and on King Edward and Record tubers in 1984. In both years few shoots but many tubers were infected on plants from non-inoculated seed and the significance of this is discussed.  相似文献   

7.
The following results were obtained when fifty-seven bulk and crate-stored commercial seed potato stocks from the East of Scotland were examined in 1966-8 for contamination by pectolytic Erwinia spp. (1) Most tubers of all the cultivars and stocks examined, irrespective of whether they were obtained from blackleg-infected or blackleg-free crops, were contaminated with E. carotovora; (2) some 80% of the Erwinia isolates obtained were identified as var. atroseptica, the rest being var. carotovora; (3) the organisms survived in and on tubers for 6–7 months of bulk storage over the winter and up to planting time the following spring; (4) contrary to what is generally thought, the high incidence of contamination of all stocks, while suggesting that the seed itself is the major source of E. carotovora for the growing crop, emphasizes that other factors affect manifestation of blackleg in the field and soft rot in store.  相似文献   

8.
Potato is major crop ensuring food security in Europe, and blackleg disease is increasingly causing losses in yield and during storage. Recently, one blackleg pathogen, Dickeya solani has been shown to be spreading in Northern Europe that causes aggressive disease development. Currently, identification of tolerant commercial potato varieties has been unsuccessful; this is confounded by the complicated etiology of the disease and a strong environmental influence on disease development. There is currently a lack of efficient testing systems. Here, we describe a system for quantification of blackleg symptoms on shoots of sterile in vitro potato plants, which saves time and space compared to greenhouse and existing field assays. We found no evidence for differences in infection between the described in vitro‐based screening method and existing greenhouse assays. This system facilitates efficient screening of blackleg disease response of potato plants independent of other microorganisms and variable environmental conditions. We therefore used the in vitro screening method to increase understanding of plant mechanisms involved in blackleg disease development by analysing disease response of hormone‐ related (salicylic and jasmonic acid) transgenic potato plants. We show that both jasmonic (JA) and salicylic (SA) acid pathways regulate tolerance to blackleg disease in potato, a result unlike previous findings in Arabidopsis defence response to necrotrophic bacteria. We confirm this by showing induction of a SA marker, pathogenesis‐related protein 1 (StPR1), and a JA marker, lipoxygenase (StLOX), in Dickeya solani infected in vitro potato plants. We also observed that tubers of transgenic potato plants were more susceptible to soft rot compared to wild type, suggesting a role for SA and JA pathways in general tolerance to Dickeya.  相似文献   

9.
Large seed tubers (mean 134 g) and small seed tubers (50 g) of three early and three maincrop potato cultivars, spaced respectively 48 and 30 cm apart within rows, were inoculated with Rhizoctonia solani at planting in 1985 and 1986. All seed of early cultivars was sprouted and maincrop seed was either sprouted or not sprouted. In all cultivars, plant emergence was slower from small than large seed and with both was delayed by inoculation. From 11 wk after planting numbers of stems and tubers and weights of foliage and tubers/m2 were usually similar from small and large seed when not inoculated, but inoculating delayed plant growth and decreased tuber numbers and yield more from small than large seed. Inoculating decreased mean yields from large and small seed of early cultivars at 11 wk by respectively 24% and 31% (Arran Comet), 12% and 18% (Estima) and by 10% and 28% (Wilja) and losses were greatest with saleable sized tubers (3–4 cm). When grown to maturity inoculating decreased yields by 7% (Arran Comet), 5% (Estima) and 14% (Wilja). With maincrop cultivars, yields in October from large and small seed were decreased by respectively 4% and 10% (DCsirke), 9% and 12% (Maris Piper) and by 14% and 22% (Pentland Squire). In all cultivars yields of tubers < 44 mm and 44–70 mm were decreased and, with Pentland Squire, tubers > 82 mm were increased. The incidence of stem canker and of black scurf on progeny tubers was not affected by seed size but in all cultivars the percentage of greened tubers was slightly increased by inoculation.  相似文献   

10.
In a series of trials in the years of 1973-76 inclusive, chitted seed tubers of potato cvs Ulster Sceptre, Majestic and Pentland Crown were immersed immediately before planting, on three dates in each year, in water, suspensions of Erwinia carotovora var. atroseptica, Phoma exigua var. foveata or a mixture of both. The development of blackleg was greatest in cv. Ulster Sceptre and most rapid after late planting. Its final incidence was not closely related to date of planting except in cv. Pentland Crown which was least affected when planted late.
Combined inoculum of P. exigua var. foveata and E. carotovora var. atroseptica increased five-fold the number of plants that failed to emerge and often retarded early growth of the remainder. Failure to emerge was more frequent the earlier seed tubers were planted. Yield was affected most by blanking and blackleg in the Erwinia- inoculated plots and was also reduced by the pre-plant dip in a P. exigua var. foveata suspension, especially after early planting.
Seed dipped in the mixed suspensions yielded progeny that after wounding and cool storage developed a lower incidence of gangrene than progeny from seed dipped in P. exigua var. foveata alone. There was no evidence that planting time influenced the incidence of gangrene during storage.  相似文献   

11.
A late blight epidemic studied at Toluca, Mexico, in 1962 may have started from stems infected at soil level by soil-borne Phytophthora infestans. Its severity was demonstrated by the large differences in the rate foliage was destroyed and in yield of tubers between fungicide-sprayed and unsprayed susceptible and resistant cultivars. The foliage resistances of some Mexican and European cultivars were compared using conventional blight keys and recording the destruction of marked leaves. Cultivars reacted in four ways: (1) Up-to-Date and Alpha leaves were infected and killed soon after plants emerged; (2) Bertita, Conchita and Florita abscissed many infected lower-canopy leaves, and many infections on upper leaves aborted; (3) Elenita leaves had a few lesions in which the fungus grew slowly but remained alive; (4) Greta showed no infection until the potato plants met between rows but then infections developed rapidly and the foliage soon died. Mexican cultivars, except for Elenita, had few blighted tubers; susceptible European cultivars were killed before many tubers formed. Most spores were released during the morning, as in Europe, and leaf infection seemed associated with days with rain when much of the night remained humid. Cool nights lengthened incubation and generation times.  相似文献   

12.
Underground stems and roots of the potato varieties King Edward and Majestic became more severely infected by Oospora pustulans (skin spot) as the growing season advanced. Tubers became infected at their initiation in June and July but the proportion of infected eyes usually increased during both the growth of the crop and bulk storage. Some buds on tubers in bulk stores died in December, but few were killed until after January, when attacks increased until by March about a quarter of Majestic eyes were usually dead. Boxing (chitting) not only prevented most eyes from dying but also prevented much skin spotting on tubers. At High Mowthorpe, Majestic seed unboxed or boxed in March yielded, respectively, 3 and 1 ton/acre less than seed boxed by January. Early boxing increased the yield of seed–sized tubers but did not affect the infection of progeny tubers. Dipping Majestic seed tubers in organo–mercurial fungicide and then boxing soon after lifting decreased their infection by O. pustulans; it also lessened infection on plants they produced and increased the yield of progeny seed–sized tubers. However, dipping, even in successive years, had little effect on the infection of progeny tubers by O. pustulans. Rhizoctonia solani and Helminihosporum atrovirens became increasingly prevalent on tubers during growth after July and during bulk storage. H. atrovirens was decreased by early boxing or dipping tubers in fungicide. Verticillate conidiophores often grew on incubated tuber plugs but their prevalence was affected by past storage. The results suggest that some of the benefit for chitting may be from disease control, it was not possible to measure the extent to which benefits from chitting depend on effects on disease or on the physiology of the tuber.  相似文献   

13.
Treatments reported to affect the incidence of ‘coiled sprout’ were studied in 1968 with the cultivar Arran Pilot in experiments near Falmouth, Cornwall (F), Rothamsted (R) and near Edinburgh (E). Most coiled stems occurred at E (37%) with similar proportions at R (19%) and F (16%). Seed tubers with the longest sprouts at planting produced most coils at all sites, those with shorter sprouts less and unsprouted seed least. When coiling was assessed on the number of plants, long- and short-sprouted seed tubers were about equally affected at R and E. Sprouts emerged within 45 days at E and 30 days at R. Longer sprouts did not emerge more quickly, but emergence was more than 1 wk later from unsprouted seed at R and only a few days later at E. Harrowing ridges after planting to decrease the depth of soil covering seed tubers hastened emergence by about 1 wk at R and decreased the incidence of coiling; it had little effect at E but tended to increase coiling at F. Seed tubers inoculated with Verticillium nubilum produced more coiled sprouts but this increase was not significant. The highest final yields were achieved at R (43-2 t/ha) where short-sprouted seed outyielded long-sprouted and unsprouted seed, but cultivation treatments and fungus inoculation had no effect. At E (21-2 t/ha) only herbicide treated plots gave a significant effect, outyielding harrowed plots by 8 t/ha. At F (18-2 t/ha) short-sprouted seed outyielded long-sprouted and unsprouted seed, and herbicide treated plots outyielded harrowed plots. When ware yields from individual plants with and without coils from long-sprouted seed were compared at R on 18 June, coiled plants gave about 30% and on 2 July 60% of the yield of non-coiled, but by 16 July 120% yield (20% more); similar trends were shown by short- and by long-sprouted seed at E.  相似文献   

14.
Effects of skin spot (Oospora pustulans) on potatoes   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
King Edward and Majestic seed potatoes selected as ‘clean’ (macroscopically symptomless), moderate and severe according to the extent of skin spot were planted in field experiments at Rothamsted between 1964 and 1968. Usually crops from ‘clean’ and moderately infected seed did not differ detectably in growth or yield. Plants from severely infected seed tubers emerged more slowly, had fewer stems and yielded less (King Edward 20 %, Majestic 13 %). Seed infection also affected tuber size distribution; severely infected seed of King Edward yielded almost 4 tons/acre less of 1 1/4-2 1/4 in tubers and Majestic, 1 ton/acre less of these and 2 tons/acre less 2 1/4-3 1/4 in tubers. However, the total yield from diseased seed stocks was only slightly less (King Edward, o-6 ton/acre and Majestic o-8 ton/acre) than the yields from the ‘clean’ tubers selected from them. Seed severely infected by Oospora pustulans often increased infection of the progeny tubers, and usually decreased their infection by Rhizoctonia solani and sometimes by Helmintho-sporium solani. Another series of experiments compared King Edward seed tubers classified according to the number of live eyes showing in March. Seed with one, two, three and more live eyes yielded equally. About half the tubers without live eyes in March eventually produced plants, but late, with few stems and giving only half the yield of seed with three or more live eyes. Surprisingly, the progeny tubers from seed without live eyes were least infected by O. pustulans, R. solani and H. solani. Progenies of King Edward and Majestic seed from a common source grown on seven widely separated farms were infected more in 1963 than in 1964, but in each year infection differed widely between farms. Often where O. pustulans was common, R. solani was scarce and vice versa. By contrast, when King Edward stocks very differently infected by O. pustulans were grown at Rothamsted their progenies were almost uniformly infected by O. pustulans and R. solani.  相似文献   

15.
Tiger nut (Cyperus esculentum) is a very profitable crop in Valencia, Spain, but in the last years, part of the harvested tubers presents black spots in the skin making them unmarketable. Surveys performed in two consecutive years showed that about 10% of the tubers were severely affected by the black spot syndrome whose aetiology is unknown. Disease control procedures based on selection of tubers used as seed (seed tubers) or treatment with hot‐water and/or chemicals were assayed in greenhouse. These assays showed that that this syndrome had a negative impact on the germination rate, tuber size and yield. Selection of asymptomatic seed tubers reduced drastically the incidence of the black spot syndrome with respect to using seed tubers with severe symptoms (selection of healthy seed tubers was not possible because the causal agent is undetermined). Thermal treatment of seed tubers with severe symptoms reduced the number of unmarketable harvested tubers by half but was detrimental for the germination. Chemical treatments of seed tubers with severe symptoms decreased the incidence of the black spot syndrome about 40% for sodium hypochlorite and about 10% for hydrochloric acid, trisodium phosphate and the fungicide trioxystrobin.  相似文献   

16.
Potato virus Y (PVY, genus Potyvirus, family Potyviridae) is transmitted non‐persistently by aphids. It causes major losses in potato production (Solanum tuberosum), especially following seed tuber‐borne infection of plants. To limit the risk of PVY infection, seed potato production is located preferably in regions where vector pressure is low. The northern‐most high‐grade seed potato production area (HG zone) of Europe is in Finland. The aim of this study was to determine the incidence of aphid species with documented ability to transmit PVY and to use a modelling approach to determine their relative importance as vectors of PVY in the HG zone of Finland. Winged aphids were caught from six to seven potato fields in each of three growing seasons (2007–09) using yellow pan traps that were examined twice a week. Identification of more than 30 000 individuals indicated that 37% of the aphids belonged to nine species reported to transmit PVY. Incidence of PVY in seed lots was low (0–5.6%) and the seasonal increase of PVY incidence was also low in the potato crops. No potato‐colonising aphids were found on the plants in any of the years. The seasonal increase in PVY incidence was modelled using aphid counts in traps, the relative vector efficiencies of the aphids, virus resistance of cultivars, and the initial infection rate of the seed tubers as explanatory variables in generalised linear mixed modelling. Akaike's information criterion was employed to find the best set of explanatory variables for PVY in harvested tubers. Results of this modelling approach showed that the incidence of seed‐borne PVY infection and the early‐season vector flights are the most important factors contributing to the incidence of PVY in the yield. Compared to models with data from all potential vector species, models containing data from Aphis fabae only showed a better model fit with regard to the incidence of PVY in the harvested tubers. The explanatory power of the models was lost when A. fabae was omitted from the vector data, suggesting that other species play a negligible role as vectors of PVY in the HG zone of Finland. Results can be used to devise appropriate strategies for enhanced control of PVY.  相似文献   

17.
Blackleg and soft rot of potato cause economic loss through reduced yield and quality. The causal agents of bacterial blackleg and soft rot of potato were identified based on biological data and sequence analyses of the 16S rDNA gene. Between 2016 and 2018, diseased potato stems and tubers were collected in Chai Prakan District, Chiang Mai Province, and Chiang Khum District, Pa Yao Province. The symptoms included black stem lesions, soft rot on tubers, wilting, break down of the stem vascular ring and foliar yellowing. Of 13 bacterial isolates, five were identified as Pectobacterium carotovorum subsp. brasiliense, four‐Dickeya dadantii, two‐Pseudomonas putida and two‐Bacillus altitudinis. Pathogenicity tests of P. carotovorum subsp. brasiliense and D. dadantii resulted in lower leaves turning yellow and wilting followed by blackleg symptoms on lower stems and maceration of tuber tissue. Symptoms caused by Pputida were yellowing and wilting of leaves. Baltitudinis caused yellowing of the lower leaves and wilting followed by drying of leaf tissue. This is a first report of these bacterial pathogens causing blackleg and soft rot of potato in Thailand.  相似文献   

18.
In 1983 and 1984, potato seed tubers of five early and seven maincrop cultivars were inoculated with cultures of Rhizoctonia solani during planting in field experiments to simulate severe seed infection. The size of foliage was assessed during June-August and tuber yields recorded during growth and at harvest in October. Stem canker delayed shoot emergence, decreased the number and length of stems and caused increased variation in stem length; these effects were greatest with Maris Peer and Arran Comet (early cultivars) and King Edward and Pentland Squire (maincrop cultivars). Total weight of foliage was decreased, especially with earlies, dry matter of stems increased and the proportion of foliage on lateral stems increased. With the early cultivars, tuber yield from sprouted Maris Peer seed 11 wk after planting in 1983 was decreased by 24%, and 13 wk after planting in 1984 yields were decreased by 42% (Maris Peer), 40% (Ulster Sceptre), 34% (Estima), 30% (Arran Comet) and 17% (Ulster Prince) with sprouted seed and by 20, 29, 53, 39 and 28% respectively with non-sprouted seed. Decrease in total yield at harvest in October averaged 13% with sprouted seed and 10% with non-sprouted seed. In all cultivars the weight of small tubers was decreased and with Estima the weight of large tubers was increased. Tuber bulking was also delayed with all maincrop cultivars and at harvest yields from sprouted King Edward seed were decreased by 13% in 1983 and by 16% (sprouted seed) and 23% (non-sprouted seed) in 1984; yields of Pentland Squire were decreased by 5, 16 and 21% respectively. Yield losses with other cultivars ranged from 5–13% with sprouted seed and 0–16% with non-sprouted seed. The yields of small tubers were decreased with all cultivars and yields of large tubers were increased with Pentland Squire, Pentland Crown and Cara.  相似文献   

19.
Potato seed tubers of seven cultivars derived from stem cuttings in 1965 (healthier seed) were grown in 1969–72 at two sites, one clay with flints soil (Rothamsted) and the other sandy loam soil (Woburn). Inoculating sprouted tubers at planting with Polyscytalum pustulans did not affect the number of stems/plant or total yield but increased stem base and tuber infection. The yields of large tubers (57–83 cm) were increased and small tubers (>57 cm) decreased, indicating a decrease in tuber numbers. Rhizoctonia solani inoculated at planting decreased numbers of stems/plant and yield by up to 14% at Woburn but not at Rothamsted. At both sites, yields of large tubers were increased with cvs Majestic and Record and decreased with Pentland Crown. Stem canker and tuber infection were increased but infection was also prevalent on tubers from non-inoculated seed at Woburn. When both pathogens were inoculated together yields of large tubers were increased in cvs King Edward, Majestic and Record and decreased in Pentland Crown. Infection of stem bases and tubers was sometimes less than when either pathogen was inoculated singly.  相似文献   

20.
The relationships between rain and blight (Phytophthora infestans) were studied in unsprayed crops of cultivars differing widely in foliage and tuber susceptibility. The occasions when tubers were infected depended on rain and not cultivar, but numbers of tubers infected after rain was affected by the blight susceptibility of the cultivar. Infected tubers were first found when less than 5 % (BMS key) of the potato foliage was infected but few fresh infections occurred when 50–75% of the foliage had been destroyed. Some tubers were infected after 8 mm rain (tubers near the surface with even less) but large increases in numbers of tubers infected usually occurred only after 25 mm or more had increased soil moisture to above ‘field capacity’ around the tuber for at least 24 h. The most susceptible cultivars Ulster Ensign and Arran Banner had all plants with some tuber blight, and some plants with all tubers affected and often many lesions per tuber. Cultivars of intermediate susceptibility, King Edward and Up-to-Date, had some plants without blighted tubers, many with a few and very few with all. The more resistant cultivars Majestic and Arran Viking had many plants without infected tubers and many lesions that aborted while still necrotic threads, so that the fungus did not spread. Most infections occurred through tuber eyes, lenticels or sometimes growth cracks. The distribution of blight lesions on tubers differed in the different seasons, for example, lenticels were most commonly infected on Arran Banner and Ulster Ensign and eyes on King Edward, Majestic and Arran Viking. In late or slowly developing attacks, lesions on stems became more numerous and larger than in fast, early attacks and were prolific sources of spores on King Edward and Up-to-Date but not on Majestic and Arran Viking. Because much rain water runs down the stems of Up-to-Date and King Edward, stem lesions can provide an important source of inoculum for tubers.  相似文献   

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