
Effect of different inoculum levels of P. arborescens in disease development and yield losses of opium poppy
Author(s) -
Roop Singh,
Pokhar Rawal,
Irfan Latif Khan
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
international journal of plant sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 0976-593X
pISSN - 0973-1547
DOI - 10.15740/has/ijps/16.2/93-98
Subject(s) - downy mildew , husk , opium poppy , biology , yield (engineering) , inoculation , horticulture , crop , spore , agronomy , veterinary medicine , papaver , botany , medicine , materials science , metallurgy
Downy mildew (DM) caused by Peronospora arborescens is the most alarming disease of opium poppy which hampered the production of opium crop in major growing areas of India. The pooled data taken from Rabi 2016-17 and 2017-18 demonstrated that chemical protected un-inoculated plot had a minimum per cent disease severity (9.83) with maximum dry latex yield (31.25 kg ha-1), seed yield (801.31 kg ha-1) and husk yield (889.66 kg ha-1). However, plots inoculated with Peronospora arborescens at high inoculum density of 9×105 spores ml-1 had considerably higher per cent disease severity (67.00) and minimum dry latex yield (6.94 kg ha-1), seed yield (548.42 kg ha-1) and husk yield (590.86 kg ha-1) with maximum 77.79,31.56 and 33.58 per cent loss as compared to un-inoculated chemical protected plot, respectively. The severity of the downy mildew disease was found to rise in direct conflict with the level of inoculum concentration with significant reduction in dry latex yield, seed yield and husk yield.