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Effect of Placement and Sequence of Inoculation with Fusarium oxysporum on its Interaction with Meloidogyne arenaria on Subterranean Clover
Authors:S H Pung    K Sivasithamparam  M J Barbetti
Institution:Soil Science and Plant Nutrition Group, The University of Western Australia, Nedlands 6009 (Western Australia).;Plant Pathology Branch, Department of Agriculture, Baron-Hay Court, South Perth 6151 (Western Australia).
Abstract:The effect of the placement of inoculum of Fusarium oxysporum at two soil depths, and the sequences of inoculations with Meloidogyne arenaria and Fusarium oxysporum on root growth and development of root disease in Trifolium subterraneum L. (subterranean clover) were investigated. The timing of infection and the proximity of root tips of the host root system to infection by M. arenaria and F. oxysporum appeared to be the major determining factors of root growth and of disease development in plants exposed to the pathogens. Immediate contact of roots with F. oxysporum (where the fungus was placed at seed level of 10 mm depth) appeared to result in more severe effects on roots in the presence of the nematode than later infection by the fungus placed at 30 mm depth. The production of galls by the nematode and early infection by F. oxysporum at 10 mm depth resulted in a severe inhibition of root growth, particularly of the lateral roots. But no such growth inhibition was evident when F. oxysporum and M. arenaria were introduced together at the lower depth of 30 mm. The lowest density of M. arenaria inoculum was sufficient to cause severe root rot if F. oxysporum was present at the host seed level. With the fungus at 30 mm depth, however, the expression of root rot appeared to be influenced by the inoculum level of the nematode. In sequential inoculation with F. oxysporum or M. arenaria, the organism added 2 weeks later had little or no effect on root development. The first organism (M. arenaria or F. oxysporum) to infect the germinated seedlings was the main cause of root growth inhibition. The organism that came into contact with the roots 2 weeks later had little or no effect on the roots. Concurrent infection by F. oxysporum and M. arenaria resulted in less M. arenaria gall production on the tap root system than those added with the nematode alone or in advance of the fungus.
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