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The interactions of potato cyst nematodes and Verticillium dahliae on early and maincrop potato cultivars
Author(s) -
EVANS K.
Publication year - 1987
Publication title -
annals of applied biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.677
H-Index - 80
eISSN - 1744-7348
pISSN - 0003-4746
DOI - 10.1111/j.1744-7348.1987.tb03263.x
Subject(s) - verticillium dahliae , biology , verticillium wilt , cultivar , globodera rostochiensis , verticillium , fungus , heterodera , globodera pallida , nematode , plant disease resistance , agronomy , potato cyst nematode , botany , horticulture , solanaceae , gene , ecology , biochemistry
SUMMARY The effects of potato cyst nematodes ( Globodera rostochiensis and G. pallida ) on the growth of early and later maturing potato cultivars, with or without the H, resistance gene, were compared in pot experiments and the effects of introducing Verticillium dahliae into the system were studied. The influence of the nematodes on root function and structural integrity was inferred from their effects on calcium and water uptake. Early maturing cultivars were less tolerant of nematode attack than later maturing ones, and those with the H 1 resistance gene were more tolerant of G. rostochiensis than G. pallida. When V. dahliae was introduced, Verticillium wilt symptoms appeared much earlier on the early than the maincrop cultivars. Also, Maris Anchor (first early) died before Maris Peer (second early) and death of both when infected by nematodes and fungus was much earlier than uninfected control plants or plants infected with G. rostochiensis only. Maris Peer infected by both organisms snowed symptoms much more severe than when infected by either organism alone, whereas Maris Anchor was almost as severely affected by V. dahliae alone as both organisms together. Pentland Javelin (first early) developed Verticillium wilt symptoms several weeks later than other cultivars and the addition of nematodes failed to increase the severity of the symptoms. These differences in cultivar susceptibility to the combination of nematodes and fungus may be due to the nematodes causing different degrees of trauma in the roots of the three cultivars: measuring calcium uptake per unit water uptake showed that nematodes dramatically increase calcium uptake but that the proportional change is least in Pentland Javelin. If this is a reflection of less damage by nematodes to the endodermis of this cultivar, it may explain the greater resistance of its roots to penetration by V. dahliae.

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