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POPULATION DIFFERENCES IN INDIGENOUS FUSARIUM SPECIES BY CORN CULTURE OF PRAIRIE SOIL
Authors:Carol E. Windels  Thor Kommedahl
Affiliation:Department of Plant Pathology, University of Minnesota, St. Paul, 55101
Abstract:Six species of Fusarium were identified among approximately 7,000 cultures isolated from roots and soils collected from prairies and cornfields in southern Minnesota. In both soil sources, F. oxysporum and F. solani predominated, followed in order by F. roseum, F. episphaeria, F. tricinctum, and F. moniliforme. The same order was obtained for the 28 species of prairie grasses and forbs as for corn. From prairie plant and corn roots, respectively, F. oxysporum was isolated from 64 and 90%; F. solani, 26 and 80%; F. roseum, 8 and 35%; and F. tricinctum, 6 % each. In 10 of 17 companion soil pairs, populations of Fusarium species were higher in cornfield than in prairie soils. Populations of F. roseum and F. moniliforme especially, were higher in cornfield soils of sample pairs, but populations of F. solani were higher in prairie soils. Fusarium roseum ‘Equiseti’ was the predominant cultivar of this species in both prairie and cornfield soils. Thus all six species of Fusarium appeared to be indigenous to the prairie, and some, especially F. roseum, apparently had increased in prevalence in soil and roots by corn culture.
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