ON THE PREVALENCE OF PATHOGENIC FORMS OF HELMINTHOSPORIUM SATIVUM AND FUSARIUM CULMORUM IN THE SOIL OF WHEAT FIELDS AND ITS RELATION TO THE ROOT ROT PROBLEM

1934 ◽  
Vol 10 (3) ◽  
pp. 264-274 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. B. Sanford ◽  
W. C. Broadfoot

A total of 227 isolates of Helminthosporium sativum and 286 of Fusarium sp. (culmorum type) were obtained from the diseased crown tissue of wheat stubble in five fields located in the black soil belt of central Alberta, and an attempt was made to determine their relative virulence on wheat seedlings and on mature plants. The experiment was carried out under greenhouse conditions, with a range of soil temperature. Sterilized, artificially infested soil in open pot culture was used. The results indicated that the Helminthosporium isolates were as a rule moderately to weakly pathogenic, and that most of the Fusarium isolates were only weakly pathogenic to wheat plants in the seedling stage. Some isolates of each pathogen exhibited extreme virulence, but judging from the results on seedling plants, virulent strains were rather rare in the fields studied. On mature plants both fungi showed about equal degrees of virulence, which was on the whole weak, and the results were not considered significant for the purpose of the study. More isolates of the greater degrees of virulence were obtained from certain fields than from others. In view of the great susceptibility of seedling plants in sterilized re-infested soil and the variable results, presumably caused by association effects of contaminants of the soil in open pot culture, it was concluded that the object of the study could not be attained by means of data based on the seedling stage, or by the technique employed. The possibility of significant results being secured in sterilized re-infested soil, protected from contamination, and based only on mature plants, is discussed in relation to the root rot problem.

1934 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 115-124 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. C. Broadfoot

The crown and root tissue from 43,305 of 47,360 plants examined in this investigation yielded Helminthosporium sativum, Fusarium culmorum and other Fusarium spp., either alone or in combination with these or other fungi and bacteria. It was the exception for any mature plant, the surface tissue of which was disinfected, to be free from fungi or bacteria. None of the various crop sequences or cultural practices used in this study appeared to significantly affect more than another the relative prevalence of either H. sativum or Fusarium spp., as indicated by isolations from the crown tissue of wheat. However, as there was a marked tendency at certain stations each year for H. sativum or Fusarium spp. to predominate, it was concluded that certain factors of the environment were more effective than the crop sequence in modifying the relative prevalence of the two fungi mentioned in the crown and root tissue of wheat plants.


1933 ◽  
Vol 8 (5) ◽  
pp. 483-491 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. C. Broadfoot

Studies were made to determine whether, in sterilized inoculated soil, Marquis wheat plants became more or less susceptible during the post-seedling stage to Ophiobolus graminis, Helminthosporium sativum, and Fusarium culmorum. While it was found that the plants in the seedling stage were more susceptible than at later stages, there was, with the technique used, no evidence that the plants become more or less susceptible during the post-seedling stage. The reasons for indefinite evidence on this important question are given. In sterilized soil, in open pot culture, inoculum of O. graminis was definitely more virulent when alone than when mixed singly or in combination with H. sativum, F. culmorum or Leptosphaeria herpotrichoides. The virulence of all pathogenes mentioned decreased progressively in sterilized soil, the greatest decrease taking place during the first 40 days, after which they were only slightly pathogenic and at the end of 120 days inoculum of O. graminis was impotent. The virulence of inoculum when added to unsterilized soil was greatly reduced in contrast with that in sterilized soil, and after 10 days it was practically at a minimum. These results emphasize the necessity of protecting inoculated sterilized soil against contamination by other micro-organisms in critical studies made in soil. They also throw light on the much recognized difficulty of producing foot rot in the field by prepared inoculum added to such soil.


1943 ◽  
Vol 21c (1) ◽  
pp. 18-25 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. E. Tyner ◽  
W. C. Broadfoot

The effect of iron tartrate on the development of chlorosis in wheat seedlings in nutrient solutions, and also the effect of extracts of Helminthosporium sativum P. K. & B. and Fusarium culmorum W. G. Sm. on disease expression, were studied under greenhouse conditions. Iron tartrate was effective in preventing chlorosis. Less iron was required in summer plantings than in winter plantings. Also, less iron was required in solutions with the higher hydrogen ion concentrations. Under the conditions employed, manganese effected no amelioration of chlorotic symptoms in the presence of a deficiency of iron.Sterilized and unsterilized filtered extracts of the pathogens mentioned added to crocks of the nutrient solution inhibited the growth of wheat seedlings, an effect in soil culture which is interpreted as an index of pathogenicity.


1959 ◽  
Vol 39 (2) ◽  
pp. 187-193 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. J. Sallans

The tendency of wheat plants to recover from initial stunting by Helminthosporium sativum and Fusarium culmorum was studied under field conditions by comparing areas of the successively formed leaves of the main culm. The yields of grain were taken as the over-all measure of the influence of disease on the plants.H. sativum when applied to seed caused significant reduction in areas of the first and second leaves of the seedlings. Successive leaves were progressively larger in relation to those of the uninoculated plants. The two varieties in the experiment were about equally stunted in the early seedling stage. Reward made a notable recovery as indicated by increased areas of the later leaves and a substantially greater yield of grain than in the controls. Thatcher made only a partial recovery and its yield of grain was slightly depressed.F. culmorum produced less stunting than H. sativum in seedling leaves, and recovery as indicated in the later leaves was less marked though significant.H. sativum and F. culmorum on the same plants caused more initial stunting of leaves followed by greater recovery than with either fungus alone.


1933 ◽  
Vol 8 (6) ◽  
pp. 545-552 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. C. Broadfoot

The antagonistic and compatible growth relationships of 66 cultures of bacteria and fungi, most of which were from the soil, towards O. graminis on potato dextrose agar and Molisch's salt peptone agar, were compared with the effect of each on the virulence of this pathogene on wheat seedlings in open soil culture.Of the 21 cultures which controlled the virulence of O. graminis in the soil, only 15 of these were antagonistic on potato dextrose agar, while of the 45 cultures which gave intermediate or no control, 17 were compatible and 28 were decidedly antagonistic. From data secured indirectly, the antagonism or compatibility of the micro-organisms toward O. graminis, observed on potato dextrose agar, did not seem to depend on active alkali or acid more than on other metabolic products. The study apparently demonstrates that the growth reaction of various micro-organisms and O. graminis, associated on the two solid media used, is not a reliable indication that the same micro-organism will or will not suppress the virulence of this pathogene on wheat in soil in open pot culture.


1931 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 69-77 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. W. Henry

In these studies the natural microflora of the black loam soil typical of the Edmonton district of Alberta had a marked inhibitive action on the development of the wheat foot-rotting fungus Helminthosporium sativum when the latter was grown directly in this soil. The severity of foot-rot infection of wheat seedlings caused by this pathogene was correspondingly reduced as a result of this action. A trace of unsterilized soil serving as a source of the saprophytic soil organisms had almost as great an influence as a relatively large amount. A similar effect on Fusarium graminearum, another fungous pathogene which causes loot-rot of wheat, is indicated.Bacteria, actinomycetes and fungi isolated from black soil each had a suppressive action on H. sativum in the soil and reduced the severity of foot-rot infection caused by it, but the fungi were considerably more effective than the bacteria and actinomycetes tested. A combination of all of these organisms produced the most marked effect and one equivalent to that produced by the organisms of unsterilized soil.The significance of the results in connection with the foot-rot problem of wheat is briefly discussed and their possible bearing on other plant diseases caused by soil-borne pathogenes is mentioned.


1960 ◽  
Vol 40 (2) ◽  
pp. 288-294 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Semeniuk ◽  
A. W. Henry

The relative decline of three cereal root pathogens, Ophiobolus graminis Sacc., Helminthosporium sativum P. K. B., and Fusarium culmorum (W. G. Sm.) Sacc., in natural and sterilized black loam soil, was studied using inoculum grown in a sterilized soil-cornmeal medium. Since the severity of infection of wheat seedlings by the above fungi proved directly proportional to the amount of inoculum added to natural soil, it was used as a measure of the amount of effective inoculum in the soil at a given time. It was found by this means that inoculum of all three pathogens diminished greatly in amount in natural soil during the first few days following its addition, with that of O. graminis declining least, that of H. sativum more, and that of F. culmorum most. The decline rate was proportional to the amount of inoculum. After one week the decline had progressed further, but it was less for O. graminis than for the other two pathogens. In 3–4 weeks the amount of all three had reached a near-zero quantity. In sterilized soil the decline was similar to that in natural soil after the sterilized soil became recontaminated. However, that of F. culmorum was less pronounced here than in natural soil. Marked decline of O. graminis also occurred in natural soil supporting a seedling wheat crop. In large measure the decline studied appeared to be a quantitative degenerating process resulting from the activity of soil micro-organisms.


1941 ◽  
Vol 19c (2) ◽  
pp. 42-48 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. E. Tyner

Investigations were conducted on the virulence of inoculum of Helminthosporium sativum P. K. and B. and of Fusarium culmorum (W. G. Sm.) Sacc. as affected by the size of the vessel in which the inoculum was increased, the amount of corn meal present in the medium, and the period of incubation. Inoculum of either pathogen containing 12% corn meal caused more disease on wheat seedlings than that with 5%. H. sativum, 14 days old, was more virulent than after 21, 28, or 35 days' incubation, but in the case of F. culmorum, there was no definite tendency with respect to the effect of age. The size of container was unimportant if desiccation was avoided.


Author(s):  
M.M. Abdel-Kader ◽  
N.S. El-Mougy ◽  
M.S.A. Khalil ◽  
N.G. El-Gamal

Background: The most important wheat diseases that caused by soil-borne fungi are the root-rot disease. The current investigation conducted with evaluation the efficacy of some bioagents, Bacillus subtilis, Pseudomonas fluorescens, Azospirillum brasilense, Trichoderma harzianum, commercial bioagent (Planta guard) and chitosan against the causal pathogenic organisms of wheat root rot disease under greenhouse conditions. Methods: Wheat seedlings infected with root rot disease were subjected to the causal fungal isolation trails. In greenhouse, wheat grains were sown individually in pots containing artificially infested soil with the pathogenic fungi R. solani or F. graminearum. Furthermore, the tested bioagents and the fungicide Topsin-M 70 were applied to the infested soil before sowing. Result: The isolated fungi were R. solani or F. graminearum had proved their pathogenic ability to induce root rot disease of wheat. In pot experiment, all applied treatments affect root rot incidence of grown wheat seedlings in artificially infested soils with disease incidents. In infested soils with root rot incidents, bacterial bioagents reduced root rot incidence by 84.5-93.6% and 28.4- 35.3% 66.6, respectively and by 43.7% for T. harzianum. Moderate effect was obtained by chitosan and planta guard treatments in soil infested with either pathogenic fungi.


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