83 results on '"Gary C. Bergstrom"'
Search Results
2. Draft Genome Sequences of 14 Fungal Species from
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Michael R, Fulcher and Gary C, Bergstrom
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Isolates representing 14
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- 2022
3. First Report of Downy Mildew caused by
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Garrett, Giles, Elizabeth J, Indermaur, Juan Luis, Gonzalez-Giron, Taylere Q, Hermann, Savanna, Shelnutt, Jennifer, Starr, Kevin, Myers, Sandra, Jensen, Gary C, Bergstrom, Jamie, Crawford, Julie L, Hansen, Lawrence B, Smart, and Christine D, Smart
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Hemp (
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- 2022
4. First Report of Downy Mildew Caused by Pseudoperonospora cannabina on Cannabis sativa in New York
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Garrett Giles, Elizabeth J. Indermaur, Juan L. Gonzalez-Giron, Taylere Q. Herrmann, Savanna S. Shelnutt, Jennifer K. Starr, Kevin Myers, Sandra L. Jensen, Gary C. Bergstrom, Jamie L. Crawford, Julie L. Hansen, Lawrence B. Smart, and Christine D. Smart
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Plant Science ,Agronomy and Crop Science - Published
- 2023
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5. Phylogenomic Analysis of a 55.1-kb 19-Gene Dataset Resolves a Monophyletic Fusarium that Includes the Fusarium solani Species Complex
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Martijn Rep, Jenn-Wen Huang, María Mercedes Scandiani, Jin-Rong Xu, Kemal Kazan, Kathryne L. Everts, Lily W. Lofton, Véronique Edel-Hermann, Adnan Šišić, Macit Ilkit, Adriaana Jacobs, Anna Prigitano, Abdullah M. S. Al-Hatmi, Carmen Ruiz-Roldán, Marcio Nucci, Baharuddin Salleh, N.M.I. Mohamed Nor, Takayuki Aoki, Martin I. Chilvers, Chyanna McGee, Dan Vanderpool, Stephen A. Rehner, Sara R. May, David G. Schmale, Cong Jiang, Robert H. Proctor, Tapani Yli-Mattila, Frank N. Martin, Michel Monod, Hao-Xun Chang, Theo van der Lee, Kerry O'Donnell, Paul E. Verweij, Ning Zhang, Matias Pasquali, Latiffah Zakaria, Erik Lysøe, Matthew H. Laurence, Karin Jacobs, Tatiana Gagkaeva, Alicia G. Luque, Linda J. Harris, Lisa J. Vaillancourt, Edward C. Y. Liew, Gerardo Rodríguez-Alvarado, Thomas R. Gordon, Kevin K. Fuller, Balázs Brankovics, Jason E. Stajich, Gerda Fourie, Christopher W. Smyth, Christopher Toomajian, Gilvan Ferreira da Silva, Stanley Freeman, Brian L. Wickes, Anna M. Tortorano, Santiago Gutiérrez, Antonio Logrieco, Li-Jun Ma, John C. Kennell, Donald M. Gardiner, H. Corby Kistler, Xiao-Bing Yang, Scott E. Gold, Johanna Del Castillo-Múnera, Stéphane Ranque, Jie Wang, Josep Guarro, Cheryl L. Blomquist, Emerson M. Del Ponte, Sean X. Zhang, Mitchell G. Roth, Beth K. Gugino, Robert L. Bowden, Nora A. Foroud, Omer Frenkel, Maria Carmela Esposto, Emma C. Wallace, Rajagopal Subramaniam, Quirico Migheli, Grit Walther, Kathryn E. Bushley, Marcele Vermeulen, Rasmus John Normand Frandsen, Yin-Won Lee, Hye-Seon Kim, Robert E. Marra, Amgad A. Saleh, Tomasz Kulik, Gary C. Bergstrom, Anne D. van Diepeningen, María del Mar Jiménez-Gasco, Joseph D. Carrillo, Seogchan Kang, Lester W. Burgess, Manuel S. López-Berges, Martha M. Vaughan, Brett A. Summerell, Michael J. Wingfield, Gary E. Vallad, Haruhisa Suga, Françoise Munaut, Altus Viljoen, Nathan P. Wiederhold, Paul Nicholson, Ana K. Machado Wood, Eduard Venter, Giuseppina Mulè, Marieka Gryzenhout, Irene Barnes, G. Sybren de Hoog, Daren W. Brown, Christian Steinberg, Virgilio Balmas, Ludwig H. Pfenning, Cees Waalwijk, László Hornok, Sylvia Patricia Fernández-Pavía, Sung-Hwan Yun, Xue Zhang, Susan P. McCormick, Madan K. Bhattacharyya, José F. Cano-Lira, Michael Freitag, Dylan P. G. Short, Theresa Lee, Wade H. Elmer, Yong-Hwan Lee, Antonio Moretti, Todd J. Ward, Wanquan Chen, Martin Urban, David M. Geiser, Javier Diéguez-Uribeondo, Emma Theodora Steenkamp, Chi-Yu Chen, Jeffrey J. Coleman, Jacques F. Meis, Antonio Di Pietro, Imane Laraba, Hao Zhang, Anthony E. Glenn, Gary P. Munkvold, Tsutomu Arie, John F. Leslie, Sofia Noemi Chulze, Akif Eskalen, Nancy F. Gregory, Jonathan Scauflaire, Cheng-Fang Hong, Mónika Homa, Hokyoung Son, Ellie J. Spahr, Jason A. Smith, Kim E. Hammond-Kosack, Mark Busman, Christina A. Cuomo, Lindy J. Rose, Oliver Kurzai, Cassandra L. Swett, Hyunkyu Sang, Z. Wilhelm de Beer, Gretchen A. Kuldau, Antonella Susca, Diane Mostert, Matthew T. Kasson, Lynn Epstein, Terry J. Torres-Cruz, Agroécologie [Dijon], Université de Bourgogne (UB)-AgroSup Dijon - Institut National Supérieur des Sciences Agronomiques, de l'Alimentation et de l'Environnement-Université Bourgogne Franche-Comté [COMUE] (UBFC)-Institut National de Recherche pour l’Agriculture, l’Alimentation et l’Environnement (INRAE), Vecteurs - Infections tropicales et méditerranéennes (VITROME), and Institut de Recherche pour le Développement (IRD)-Aix Marseille Université (AMU)-Institut de Recherche Biomédicale des Armées [Brétigny-sur-Orge] (IRBA)
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0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,Fusarium ,Species complex ,Evolution ,[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio] ,lnfectious Diseases and Global Health Radboud Institute for Molecular Life Sciences [Radboudumc 4] ,Plant Science ,01 natural sciences ,03 medical and health sciences ,Monophyly ,Biointeractions and Plant Health ,All institutes and research themes of the Radboud University Medical Center ,Phylogenetics ,Genus ,Polyphyly ,Genetics ,Clade ,Phylogeny ,Fungal pathogens ,Plant Diseases ,2. Zero hunger ,Fungal Pathogens ,biology ,15. Life on land ,biology.organism_classification ,030104 developmental biology ,lnfectious Diseases and Global Health Radboud Institute for Health Sciences [Radboudumc 4] ,Evolutionary biology ,Taxonomy (biology) ,EPS ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,010606 plant biology & botany - Abstract
International audience; Scientific communication is facilitated by a data-driven, scientifically sound taxonomy that considers the end-user's needs and established successful practice. Previously (Geiser et al. 2013; Phytopathology 103:400-408. 2013), the Fusarium community voiced near unanimous support for a concept of Fusarium that represented a clade comprising all agriculturally and clinically important Fusarium species, including the F. solani Species Complex (FSSC). Subsequently, this concept was challenged by one research group (Lombard et al. 2015 Studies in Mycology 80: 189-245) who proposed dividing Fusarium into seven genera, including the FSSC as the genus Neocosmospora, with subsequent justification based on claims that the Geiser et al. (2013) concept of Fusarium is polyphyletic (Sandoval-Denis et al. 2018; Persoonia 41:109-129). Here we test this claim, and provide a phylogeny based on exonic nucleotide sequences of 19 orthologous protein-coding genes that strongly support the monophyly of Fusarium including the FSSC. We reassert the practical and scientific argument in support of a Fusarium that includes the FSSC and several other basal lineages, consistent with the longstanding use of this name among plant pathologists, medical mycologists, quarantine officials, regulatory agencies, students and researchers with a stake in its taxonomy. In recognition of this monophyly, 40 species recently described as Neocosmospora were recombined in Fusarium, and nine others were renamed Fusarium. Here the global Fusarium community voices strong support for the inclusion of the FSSC in Fusarium, as it remains the best scientific, nomenclatural and practical taxonomic option available.
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- 2021
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6. Soybean Yield Loss Estimates Due to Diseases in the United States and Ontario, Canada, from 2015 to 2019
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Carl A. Bradley, Tom W. Allen, Adam J. Sisson, Gary C. Bergstrom, Kaitlyn M. Bissonnette, Jason Bond, Emmanuel Byamukama, Martin I. Chilvers, Alyssa A. Collins, John P. Damicone, Anne E. Dorrance, Nicholas S. Dufault, Paul D. Esker, Travis R. Faske, Nicole M. Fiorellino, Loren J. Giesler, Glen L. Hartman, Clayton A. Hollier, Tom Isakeit, Tamra A. Jackson-Ziems, Douglas J. Jardine, Heather M. Kelly, Robert C. Kemerait, Nathan M. Kleczewski, Alyssa M. Koehler, Robert J. Kratochvil, James E. Kurle, Dean K. Malvick, Samuel G. Markell, Febina M. Mathew, Hillary L. Mehl, Kelsey M. Mehl, Daren S. Mueller, John D. Mueller, Berlin D. Nelson, Charles Overstreet, G. Boyd Padgett, Paul P. Price, Edward J. Sikora, Ian Small, Damon L. Smith, Terry N. Spurlock, Connie A. Tande, Darcy E. P. Telenko, Albert U. Tenuta, Lindsey D. Thiessen, Fred Warner, William J. Wiebold, and Kiersten A. Wise
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fungi ,food and beverages ,Plant Science ,Horticulture - Abstract
Soybean (Glycine max [L.] Merrill) yield losses as a result of plant diseases were estimated by university and government plant pathologists in 29 soybean producing states in the United States and in Ontario, Canada, from 2015 through 2019. In general, the estimated losses that resulted from each of 28 plant diseases or pathogens varied by state or province as well as year. Soybean cyst nematode (SCN) (Heterodera glycines Ichinohe) caused more than twice as much loss as any other disease during the survey period. Seedling diseases (caused by various pathogens), Sclerotinia stem rot (white mold) (caused by Sclerotinia sclerotiorum [Lib.] de Bary), and sudden death syndrome (caused by Fusarium virguliforme O’Donnell & T. Aoki) caused the next greatest yield losses, in descending order. Following SCN, the most damaging diseases in the northern United States and Ontario differed from those in the southern United States. The estimated mean economic loss from all soybean diseases, averaged across the United States and Ontario, Canada was US$45 per acre (US$111 per hectare). The outcome from the current survey will provide pertinent information regarding the important soybean diseases and their overall severity in the soybean crop and help guide future research and Extension efforts on managing soybean diseases.
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- 2021
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7. Genome-Wide Associations with Resistance to Bipolaris Leaf Spot (
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Kittikun, Songsomboon, Ryan, Crawford, Jamie, Crawford, Julie, Hansen, Jaime, Cummings, Neil, Mattson, Gary C, Bergstrom, and Donald R, Viands
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Switchgrass (
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- 2022
8. Phyllachora species infecting maize and other grass species in the Americas represents a complex of closely related species
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Kirk Broders, Gloria Iriarte‐Broders, Gary C. Bergstrom, Emmanuel Byamukama, Martin Chilvers, Christian Cruz, Felipe Dalla‐Lana, Zachary Duray, Dean Malvick, Daren Mueller, Pierce Paul, Diane Plewa, Richard Raid, Alison E. Robertson, Catalina Salgado‐Salazar, Damon Smith, Darcy Telenko, Katherine VanEtten, and Nathan M. Kleczewski
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Ecology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Nature and Landscape Conservation - Published
- 2022
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9. The Incidence of Fusarium graminearum in Wild Grasses is Associated With Rainfall and Cumulative Host Density in New York
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Gary C. Bergstrom, Michael R. Fulcher, James B. Winans, and Menchus Quan
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0106 biological sciences ,Fusarium ,Host (biology) ,ved/biology ,ved/biology.organism_classification_rank.species ,Biodiversity ,food and beverages ,Species diversity ,Plant Science ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Groundcover ,Crop ,Agronomy ,Colonization ,Sample collection ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,010606 plant biology & botany - Abstract
The movement of plant pathogens between cultivated and natural host communities can result in lost agricultural production and altered microbial or plant biodiversity. Fusarium graminearum incidence was studied in wild grass hosts for 3 years to better understand the ecology of this plant pathogen at the interface of crop fields and nonagricultural environments. Research sites (n = 23) were spread between regions of high and low agricultural production and included both agricultural and nonagricultural fields. Pathogen incidence in living grass spikes and senesced, overwintered stems varied between regions of New York and was lowest in a region with sparser agricultural production (P = 0.001). However, pathogen incidence within regions was similar at both agricultural and nonagricultural sites. The groundcover of crop and wild hosts within 1 km of sample sites were equally effective predictors of pathogen incidence, indicating either host group may drive pathogen spread. Rainfall in the 8 weeks preceding sample collection was strongly correlated with F. graminearum incidence in grasses, as well as an increased prevalence of F. graminearum in Fusarium spp. communities (P = 0.001). Grass species diversity was not associated with a reduction in pathogen incidence, and F. graminearum incidence did not vary among the most well-sampled grasses. These results indicate the pathogen colonizes and spreads in noncultivated grasses in a manner consistent with existing concepts of pathogen epidemiology in cereal crops. Increasing host acreage, whether cultivated or not, could drive the colonization of grasses in remote or protected environments, potentially altering their microbial communities.
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- 2020
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10. Preserving Spring Oat Yields in New York Through Varietal Resistance to Crown Rust
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Michael R. Fulcher, Gary C. Bergstrom, David Benscher, and Mark E. Sorrells
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0106 biological sciences ,Host resistance ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Resistance (ecology) ,Crown (botany) ,food and beverages ,Plant Science ,Horticulture ,Biology ,01 natural sciences ,Rust ,010104 statistics & probability ,Agronomy ,Spring (hydrology) ,0101 mathematics ,010606 plant biology & botany - Abstract
Crown rust is the principal disease of spring oat in New York. Management with resistance genes is effective but contingent on understanding varietal responses to local pathogen populations. Field studies were conducted from 2015 to 2018 to assess the crown rust susceptibility of commercial cultivars and public breeding lines under natural conditions in New York. Three of the 10 commercial varieties trialed were determined to be resistant, and breeding lines from five different states also exhibited resistance. On average, yield was reduced by 34.56 kg/ha for every 1% increase in crown rust severity, whereas the impact on test weight was negligible. A race differential panel was deployed in 2018 at a central screening nursery to determine the range of pathogen virulence present. Susceptible interactions were observed on only five crown rust differentials, and virulence on all five has been recorded at high levels across the country. Crown rust may be a limiting factor to oat production in New York, but yield potential and crop value can be preserved by planting an appropriately resistant variety.
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- 2020
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11. Corn Yield Loss Estimates Due to Diseases in the United States and Ontario, Canada, from 2016 to 2019
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Daren S. Mueller, Kiersten A. Wise, Adam J. Sisson, Tom W. Allen, Gary C. Bergstrom, Kaitlyn M. Bissonnette, Carl A. Bradley, Emmanuel Byamukama, Martin I. Chilvers, Alyssa A. Collins, Paul D. Esker, Travis R. Faske, Andrew J. Friskop, Austin K. Hagan, Ron W. Heiniger, Clayton A. Hollier, Tom Isakeit, Tamra A. Jackson-Ziems, Douglas J. Jardine, Heather M. Kelly, Nathan M. Kleczewski, Alyssa M. Koehler, Steve R. Koenning, Dean K. Malvick, Hillary L. Mehl, Ron F. Meyer, Pierce A. Paul, Angie J. Peltier, Paul P. Price, Alison E. Robertson, Gregory W. Roth, Edward J. Sikora, Damon L. Smith, Connie A. Tande, Darcy E. P. Telenko, Albert U. Tenuta, Lindsey D. Thiessen, and William J. Wiebold
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0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,food and beverages ,Plant Science ,Horticulture ,01 natural sciences ,010606 plant biology & botany - Abstract
Annual reductions in corn (Zea mays L.) yield caused by diseases were estimated by university Extension-affiliated plant pathologists in 26 corn-producing states in the United States and in Ontario, Canada, from 2016 through 2019. Estimated loss from each disease varied greatly by state or province and year. Gray leaf spot (caused by Cercospora zeae-maydis Tehon & E.Y. Daniels) caused the greatest estimated yield loss in parts of the northern United States and Ontario in all years except 2019, and Fusarium stalk rot (caused by Fusarium spp.) also greatly reduced yield. Tar spot (caused by Phyllachora maydis Maubl.), a relatively new disease in the United States, was estimated to cause substantial yield loss in 2018 and 2019 in several northern states. Gray leaf spot and southern rust (caused by Puccinia polysora Underw.) caused the most estimated yield losses in the southern United States. Unfavorable wet and delayed harvest conditions in 2018 resulted in an estimated 2.5 billion bushels (63.5 million metric tons) of grain contaminated with mycotoxins. The estimated mean economic loss due to reduced yield caused by corn diseases in the United States and Ontario from 2016 to 2019 was US$55.90 per acre (US$138.13 per hectare). Results from this survey provide scientists, corn breeders, government agencies, and educators with data to help inform and prioritize research, policy, and educational efforts in corn pathology and disease management.
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- 2020
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12. Sensitivity of Fusarium graminearum to Metconazole and Tebuconazole Fungicides Before and After Widespread Use in Wheat in the United States
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Carl A. Bradley, Nolan R. Anderson, Pierce A. Paul, Gary C. Bergstrom, Clayton A. Hollier, Guy B. Padgett, Travis Faske, Christina Cowger, Kiersten A. Wise, Trey Price, Nathan M. Kleczewski, and Anna Freije
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0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,Fusarium ,biology ,030106 microbiology ,Plant Science ,Horticulture ,biology.organism_classification ,01 natural sciences ,Fungicide ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Head blight ,010606 plant biology & botany ,Tebuconazole ,Demethylation - Abstract
Fusarium head blight (FHB) caused primarily by Fusarium graminearum, is a major disease of wheat in the United States. FHB is managed in part by applications of demethylation inhibitor (DMI) triazole fungicides during anthesis. The objective of this study was to examine the sensitivity of U.S. populations of F. graminearum to the DMI triazole fungicides metconazole and tebuconazole. Isolates of F. graminearum collected from wheat between 1981 and 2014 were tested for fungicide sensitivity using mycelial growth assays to determine the effective concentration at which 50% of fungal growth was inhibited (EC50). A total of 45 isolates were tested for metconazole sensitivity and 47 for sensitivity to tebuconazole. Isolates were analyzed in groups based on collection date. Groupings consisted of isolates collected prior to widespread fungicide use in wheat (designated as year 2000) or after fungicides became available for use in wheat. The mean EC50 for isolates collected prior to 2000 was 0.0240 µg/ml for metconazole and 0.1610 µg/ml for tebuconazole. For both fungicides, isolates collected between 2000 and 2014 had significantly higher (P = 0.05) mean EC50 values (mean EC50 = 0.0405 and 0.3311 µg/ml for metconazole and tebuconazole, respectively) compared with isolates collected prior to 2000. Isolate, year, and state of collection all affected the mean EC50 values of isolates collected between 2000 and 2014. A single isolate collected from Illinois in 2012 exhibited EC50 values of 0.1734 µg/ml for metconazole and 1.7339 µg/ml for tebuconazole, indicating reduced sensitivity compared with the mean EC50 of other isolates collected between 2000 and 2014. This study is the first step toward developing a fungicide sensitivity monitoring program for F. graminearum in the United States.
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- 2020
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13. A connected half‐sib family training population for genomic prediction in barley
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Gary C. Bergstrom, Daniel W. Sweeney, Jessica Rutkoski, and Mark E. Sorrells
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education.field_of_study ,Population ,Training (meteorology) ,Biology ,education ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Demography - Published
- 2020
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14. Population Genetics of Fusarium graminearum at the Interface of Wheat and Wild Grass Communities in New York
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James B. Winans, Gary C. Bergstrom, Eniola D. Oladipo, Michael R. Fulcher, and Menchus Quan
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Genetic diversity ,Agronomy ,Chemotype ,Host (biology) ,Sympatric speciation ,Mycology ,Trichothecene ,food and beverages ,Population genetics ,Plant Science ,Biology ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Gene flow - Abstract
Fusarium graminearum is primarily understood as an agricultural pathogen affecting cereal crops, but its host range also includes diverse, noncultivated grasses ubiquitous across agricultural and natural environments. Wild grasses may select for the production of diverse toxin variants (chemotypes) and serve as reservoirs of genetic diversity or sources of disease-inciting inoculum. Populations at the intersection of wheat and wild grass communities were described using 909 isolates collected from wheat spikes, wild grass spikes, and overwintered wild grass stems found at natural and agricultural sites in regions of high and low crop production. Trichothecene (TRI) genotypes correlated to pathogen chemotype were predicted from two loci, and multilocus genotypes (MLGs) were determined using eight microsatellite loci. The genetic diversity of wild grass and wheat-derived populations was comparable, and their differentiation was low. Duplicate MLGs were rare even in samples collected from a single square meter, although they could be found in multiple hosts, environments, regions, and years. TRI genotype frequencies differed between region and land use. Admixture between TRI genotype-defined populations, which correspond to three previously described sympatric North American populations, was detected and was highest in a region with remote host communities and little agricultural production. Nonagricultural environments may maintain different pathogen TRI genotypes than wheat fields and provide an opportunity for recombination between isolates from different F. graminearum populations. A lack of structural barriers suggests that pathogen gene flow is uninhibited between wheat and wild grass communities, and the recovery of putative clones from multiple hosts and environments provides initial evidence that noncultivated grasses are a source of local and regional inoculum.
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- 2019
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15. Recurrent phenotypic selection for resistance to diseases caused by Bipolaris oryzae in switchgrass (Panicum virgatum L.)
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Jaime A. Cummings, D. R. Viands, Kittikun Songsomboon, Jamie Crawford, Neil S. Mattson, Gary C. Bergstrom, J. L. Hansen, and Ryan Crawford
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biology ,Breeding program ,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment ,020209 energy ,food and beverages ,Forestry ,02 engineering and technology ,Plant disease resistance ,Heritability ,biology.organism_classification ,Bipolaris ,Agronomy ,Genetic gain ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,Panicum virgatum ,Leaf spot ,Plant breeding ,Waste Management and Disposal ,Agronomy and Crop Science - Abstract
Switchgrass (Panicum virgatum L.) is a biomass candidate crop which has been improved for yield, but disease resistance development has largely been ignored. Bipolaris oryzae (Breda de Haan) Shoemaker can cause Bipolaris seed rot, reducing seedling establishment, and Bipolaris leaf spot, reducing biomass yield. In order to initiate a breeding program, heritability based on half-sib progenies of the disease resistance were conducted in 47 half-sib progenies of lowland ‘Kanlow’ and upland ‘Cave-in-Rock’. Test crosses of progenies from resistant and susceptible parents in upland ‘Shelter’ and Cave-in-Rock were conducted to determine genetic control of resistance to Bipolaris leaf spot. To breed for resistance to two diseases, two cycles of recurrent phenotypic selection were done separately in Shelter and Cave-in-Rock at 10% selection intensity. As a result, resistance to Bipolaris seed rot showed moderate to high heritability (0.33 ± 0.16 to 0.83 ± 0.09) in both individual- and half-sib-based computations, reflecting actual genetic gain (44.5–125.3%) from two cycles of selections. However, resistance to Bipolaris leaf spot showed non-significant heritability (0.02 ± 0.06 to 0.19 ± 0.19) and non-significant progress of selection for the trait. Results from test crosses suggested that the resistance was not controlled by R genes but possibly was quantitatively inherited by many alleles with small effects. Such a difference in the gains resulted in non-significant correlation between two resistances. Due to high progress in selection resistance to Bipolaris seed rot, the screening method for resistance can be integrated to existing breeding programs.
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- 2019
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16. Fusarium graminearum species complex: A bibliographic analysis and web-accessible database for global mapping of species and trichothecene toxin chemotype
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Dinorah Pan, Gláucia M. Moreira, Silvana Vero, David G. Schmale, Lisa J. Vaillancourt, Antonio F. Logrieco, Antonio Moretti, Camila P. Nicolli, Maíra Rodrigues Duffeck, Emerson M. Del Ponte, Dauri José Tessmann, Theo van der Lee, Sofia Noemi Chulze, Lindy J. Rose, Kerry O'Donnel, Gert van Coller, Paul D. Esker, Theresa Lee, Kaique S. Alves, Todd J. Ward, Sebastian Alberto Stenglein, Franklin Jackson Machado, H. C. Kistler, Cees Waalwijk, Gary C. Bergstrom, Altus Viljoen, and Hao Zhang
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Fusarium ,Species complex ,Chemotype ,Database ,Host (biology) ,Strain (biology) ,Species distribution ,Trichothecene ,food and beverages ,Plant Science ,Biology ,computer.software_genre ,biology.organism_classification ,Biointeractions and Plant Health ,Genotype ,fungal pathogens ,EPS ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,computer - Abstract
Fusarium graminearum is ranked among the five most destructive fungal pathogens that affect agroecosystems. It causes floral diseases in small grain cereals including wheat, barley, and oats, as well as maize and rice. We conducted a systematic review of peer-reviewed studies reporting species within the F. graminearum species complex (FGSC) and created two main data tables. The first contained summarized data from the articles including bibliographic, geographic, methodological (ID methods), host of origin and species, while the second data table contains information about the described strains such as publication, isolate code(s), host/substrate, year of isolation, geographical coordinates, species and trichothecene genotype. Analyses of the bibliographic data obtained from 123 publications from 2000 to 2021 by 498 unique authors and published in 40 journals are summarized. We describe the frequency of species and chemotypes for 16,274 strains for which geographical information was available, either provided as raw data or extracted from the publications, and sampled across six continents and 32 countries. The database and interactive interface are publicly available, allowing for searches, summarization, and mapping of strains according to several criteria including article, country, host, species and trichothecene genotype. The database will be updated as new articles are published and should be useful for guiding future surveys and exploring factors associated with species distribution such as climate and land use. Authors are encouraged to submit data at the strain level to the database, which is accessible at https://fgsc.netlify.app .
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- 2021
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17. Genome‐wide association mapping of seedling and adult plant response to stem rust in a durum wheat panel
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Karim Ammar, Gary C. Bergstrom, Maricelis Acevedo, Shitaye H. Megerssa, Gina Brown-Guedira, Ashenafi G. Degete, Bekele Abeyo, Mark E. Sorrells, Brian P. Ward, and Pablo D. Olivera
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0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,Single-nucleotide polymorphism ,Locus (genetics) ,Plant Science ,QH426-470 ,Plant disease resistance ,Quantitative trait locus ,Stem rust ,01 natural sciences ,SB1-1110 ,03 medical and health sciences ,Genotype ,Genetics ,Plant breeding ,Triticum ,Disease Resistance ,Plant Diseases ,biology ,Haplotype ,Plant culture ,food and beverages ,biology.organism_classification ,Plant Breeding ,030104 developmental biology ,Seedlings ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Genome-Wide Association Study ,010606 plant biology & botany - Abstract
Many of the major stem rust resistance genes deployed in commercial wheat (Triticum spp.) cultivars and breeding lines become ineffective over time because of the continuous emergence of virulent races. A genome‐wide association study (GWAS) was conducted using 26,439 single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) markers and 280 durum wheat [Triticum turgidum L. subsp. Durum (Desf.) Husnot] lines from CIMMYT to identify genomic regions associated with seedling resistance to races TTKSK, TKTTF, JRCQC, and TTRTF and field resistance to TKTTF and JRCQC. The phenotypic data analysis across environments revealed 61–91 and 59–77% of phenotypic variation was explained by the genotypic component for seedling and adult plant response of lines, respectively. For seedling resistance, mixed linear model (MLM) identified eight novel and nine previously reported quantitative trait loci (QTL) while a fixed and random model circulating probability unification (FarmCPU) detected 12 novel and eight previously reported QTL. For field resistance, MLM identified 12 novel and seven previously reported loci while FarmCPU identified seven novel and nine previously reported loci. The regions of Sr7a, Sr8155B1, Sr11, alleles of Sr13, Sr17, Sr22/Sr25, and Sr49 were identified. Novel loci on chromosomes 3B, 4A, 6A, 6B, 7A, and 7B could be used as sources of resistance to the races virulent on durum wheat. Two large‐effect markers on chromosome 6A could potentially be used to differentiate resistant haplotypes of Sr13 (R1 and R3). Allelism tests for Sr13, breaking the deleterious effect associated with Sr22/Sr25 and retaining the resistance allele at the Sr49 locus, are needed to protect future varieties from emerging races.
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- 2021
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18. Evaluation of Industrial Hemp Seed Treatments for Management of Damping-Off for Enhanced Stand Establishment
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Hilary Mayton, Masoume Amirkhani, Michael Loos, Burton Johnson, John Fike, Chuck Johnson, Kevin Myers, Jennifer Starr, Gary C. Bergstrom, and Alan Taylor
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food and beverages ,biopesticides ,biological control ,Pythium ,Cannabis sativa L ,organic copper ,phosphite ,Plant Science ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Food Science - Abstract
The purpose of this research was to collect efficacy data on biological, biochemical, and chemical fungicide seed treatments on hemp (Cannabis sativa L.) to mitigate damping-off and enhance field stand establishment. Seed treatments were evaluated in fields in New York (NY), North Dakota (ND), and Virginia (VA) and at two planting dates in each state in 2020. A single seed lot of a dual-purpose (fiber + grain) cultivar (‘Anka’) was treated using a laboratory-scale rotary pan coater. Five biological, two biochemical, and four chemical seed treatments were tested. A laboratory germination test revealed that seed treatments did not exhibit phytotoxicity when compared to the non-treated control. A laboratory bioassay with naturally infested soil was used to assess the preliminary activity of seed treatments for protection against damping-off. The biochemical seed treatment Ultim® (active ingredient; organic copper) performed as well as the chemical treatments Apron XL® + Maxim® 4FS and Mertect® 340F in preventing damping-off whereas the biological treatments did not differ from the non-treated control in terms of disease incidence. In all field tests, biological seed treatments did not improve plant stands compared to the non-treated control. Biochemical seed treatments Prudent 44® with Nutrol® (active ingredient; phosphite) and Ultim®, along with chemical seed treatments, had acceptable efficacy and improved stand establishment compared to the non-treated control across field locations. Based on efficacy results from laboratory and field trials, the copper seed treatment has potential for both conventional and organic hemp production.
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- 2022
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19. Phylogenomic Analysis of a 55.1-kb 19-Gene Dataset Resolves a Monophyletic
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David M, Geiser, Abdullah M S, Al-Hatmi, Takayuki, Aoki, Tsutomu, Arie, Virgilio, Balmas, Irene, Barnes, Gary C, Bergstrom, Madan K, Bhattacharyya, Cheryl L, Blomquist, Robert L, Bowden, Balázs, Brankovics, Daren W, Brown, Lester W, Burgess, Kathryn, Bushley, Mark, Busman, José F, Cano-Lira, Joseph D, Carrillo, Hao-Xun, Chang, Chi-Yu, Chen, Wanquan, Chen, Martin, Chilvers, Sofia, Chulze, Jeffrey J, Coleman, Christina A, Cuomo, Z Wilhelm, de Beer, G Sybren, de Hoog, Johanna, Del Castillo-Múnera, Emerson M, Del Ponte, Javier, Diéguez-Uribeondo, Antonio, Di Pietro, Véronique, Edel-Hermann, Wade H, Elmer, Lynn, Epstein, Akif, Eskalen, Maria Carmela, Esposto, Kathryne L, Everts, Sylvia P, Fernández-Pavía, Gilvan Ferreira, da Silva, Nora A, Foroud, Gerda, Fourie, Rasmus J N, Frandsen, Stanley, Freeman, Michael, Freitag, Omer, Frenkel, Kevin K, Fuller, Tatiana, Gagkaeva, Donald M, Gardiner, Anthony E, Glenn, Scott E, Gold, Thomas R, Gordon, Nancy F, Gregory, Marieka, Gryzenhout, Josep, Guarro, Beth K, Gugino, Santiago, Gutierrez, Kim E, Hammond-Kosack, Linda J, Harris, Mónika, Homa, Cheng-Fang, Hong, László, Hornok, Jenn-Wen, Huang, Macit, Ilkit, Adriaana, Jacobs, Karin, Jacobs, Cong, Jiang, María Del Mar, Jiménez-Gasco, Seogchan, Kang, Matthew T, Kasson, Kemal, Kazan, John C, Kennell, Hye-Seon, Kim, H Corby, Kistler, Gretchen A, Kuldau, Tomasz, Kulik, Oliver, Kurzai, Imane, Laraba, Matthew H, Laurence, Theresa, Lee, Yin-Won, Lee, Yong-Hwan, Lee, John F, Leslie, Edward C Y, Liew, Lily W, Lofton, Antonio F, Logrieco, Manuel S, López-Berges, Alicia G, Luque, Erik, Lysøe, Li-Jun, Ma, Robert E, Marra, Frank N, Martin, Sara R, May, Susan P, McCormick, Chyanna, McGee, Jacques F, Meis, Quirico, Migheli, N M I, Mohamed Nor, Michel, Monod, Antonio, Moretti, Diane, Mostert, Giuseppina, Mulè, Françoise, Munaut, Gary P, Munkvold, Paul, Nicholson, Marcio, Nucci, Kerry, O'Donnell, Matias, Pasquali, Ludwig H, Pfenning, Anna, Prigitano, Robert H, Proctor, Stéphane, Ranque, Stephen A, Rehner, Martijn, Rep, Gerardo, Rodríguez-Alvarado, Lindy Joy, Rose, Mitchell G, Roth, Carmen, Ruiz-Roldán, Amgad A, Saleh, Baharuddin, Salleh, Hyunkyu, Sang, María Mercedes, Scandiani, Jonathan, Scauflaire, David G, Schmale, Dylan P G, Short, Adnan, Šišić, Jason A, Smith, Christopher W, Smyth, Hokyoung, Son, Ellie, Spahr, Jason E, Stajich, Emma, Steenkamp, Christian, Steinberg, Rajagopal, Subramaniam, Haruhisa, Suga, Brett A, Summerell, Antonella, Susca, Cassandra L, Swett, Christopher, Toomajian, Terry J, Torres-Cruz, Anna M, Tortorano, Martin, Urban, Lisa J, Vaillancourt, Gary E, Vallad, Theo A J, van der Lee, Dan, Vanderpool, Anne D, van Diepeningen, Martha M, Vaughan, Eduard, Venter, Marcele, Vermeulen, Paul E, Verweij, Altus, Viljoen, Cees, Waalwijk, Emma C, Wallace, Grit, Walther, Jie, Wang, Todd J, Ward, Brian L, Wickes, Nathan P, Wiederhold, Michael J, Wingfield, Ana K M, Wood, Jin-Rong, Xu, Xiao-Bing, Yang, Tapani, Yli-Mattila, Sung-Hwan, Yun, Latiffah, Zakaria, Hao, Zhang, Ning, Zhang, Sean X, Zhang, and Xue, Zhang
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Fusarium ,Plants ,Phylogeny ,Plant Diseases - Abstract
Scientific communication is facilitated by a data-driven, scientifically sound taxonomy that considers the end-user's needs and established successful practice. In 2013, the
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- 2020
20. Geographic variation in the genetic basis of resistance to leaf rust between locally adapted ecotypes of the biofuel crop switchgrass (Panicum virgatum)
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Francis M. Rouquette, Acer VanWallendael, David B. Lowry, Philip A. Fay, Gary C. Bergstrom, Jason Bonnette, Felix B. Fritschi, Thomas E. Juenger, Robert B. Mitchell, and John Lloyd-Reilley
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Plant evolution ,Puccinia ,Ecotype ,education.field_of_study ,biology ,Physiology ,Basidiomycota ,Population ,food and beverages ,Plant Science ,Plant disease resistance ,Quantitative trait locus ,biology.organism_classification ,Panicum ,Rust ,Genetic architecture ,Agronomy ,Biofuels ,Genetic variation ,education ,Geographic difference ,Local adaptation ,Disease Resistance ,Plant Diseases - Abstract
Pathogens play an important role in the evolution of plant populations, but genetic mechanisms underlying disease resistance may differ greatly between geographic areas as well as over time. Local adaptation is thought to be an important step in plant evolution, and may be impacted by differential pathogen pressures in concert with abiotic factors. This study uses locally adapted ecotypes of the native perennial switchgrass (Panicum virgatum) to examine the temporal and spatial variation in the genetic architecture of resistance to fungal pathogens, namely switchgrass leaf rust (Puccinia novopanici). To identify loci underlying variation in pathogen resistance in switchgrass, we scored rust damage across an outcrossed mapping population at eight locations across the central United States from southern Texas to Michigan. We followed rust progression at these sites for three years and mapped quantitative trait loci (QTLs) using function-valued transformations of rust progression curves. Overall, we mapped 51 QTLs that varied in presence and strength over the three-year period. Two large-effect QTLs were consistently associated with variation in rust progression in multiple sites and years, and are therefore potentially the result of the same underlying resistance genes. Interestingly, these two large-effect QTLs were almost exclusively detected in northern sites. This pattern could be caused by geographic difference in genetic architecture. The distribution of rust strains or variation in climatic conditions across the field sites could result in genotype-by-environment interactions in efficacy of rust resistance loci. Beyond reducing rust damage by 34%, the beneficial alleles at the two loci also increased biomass by 44%, suggesting a direct benefit by pleiotropy or indirect benefit through genetic linkage. Our results suggest an important role for fungal pathogens in the local adaptation of switchgrass and illustrate an influential geographic component of the genetic architecture of plant disease resistance.
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- 2020
21. Managing a Destructive, Episodic Crop Disease: A National Survey of Wheat and Barley Growers' Experience With Fusarium Head Blight
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Gary C. Bergstrom, Carl A. Bradley, Christina Cowger, Dennis D. Boos, Joy M. Smith, and Joel K. Ransom
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Fusarium ,biology ,Maryland ,Sowing ,Kentucky ,Hordeum ,Plant Science ,biology.organism_classification ,Crop ,Fungicide ,Agronomy ,Disease management (agriculture) ,Crop disease ,Head blight ,North Dakota ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Cultivar ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Triticum ,Plant Diseases - Abstract
The main techniques for minimizing Fusarium head blight (FHB, or scab) and deoxynivalenol in wheat and barley are well established and generally available: planting of moderately FHB-resistant cultivars, risk monitoring, and timely use of the most effective fungicides. Yet the adoption of these techniques remains uneven across the FHB-prone portions of the U.S. cereal production area. A national survey was undertaken by the U.S. Wheat and Barley Scab Initiative in 17 states where six market classes of wheat and barley are grown. In 2014, 5,107 usable responses were obtained. The highest percentages reporting losses attributable to FHB in the previous 5 years were in North Dakota, Maryland, Kentucky, and states bordering the Great Lakes but across all states, ≥75% of respondents reported no FHB-related losses in the previous 5 years. Adoption of cultivar resistance was uneven by state and market class and was low except among hard red spring wheat growers. In 13 states, a majority of respondents had not applied an FHB-targeted fungicide in the previous 5 years. Although the primary FHB information source varied by state, crop consultants were considered to be an important source or their primary source of information on risk or management of FHB by the largest percentage of respondents. Use of an FHB risk forecasting website was about twice as high in North Dakota as the 17-state average of 6%. The most frequently cited barriers to adopting FHB management practices were weather or logistics preventing timely fungicide application, difficulty in determining flowering timing for fungicide applications, and the impracticality of FHB-reducing rotations. The results highlight the challenges of managing an episodically damaging crop disease and point to specific areas for improvement.
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- 2020
22. Meta-Analysis of the Effects of QoI and DMI Fungicide Combinations on Fusarium Head Blight and Deoxynivalenol in Wheat
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Gary C. Bergstrom, Carl A. Bradley, Eugene A. Milus, Ruth Dill-Macky, Pierce A. Paul, Paul D. Esker, K. Ruden, Arvydas P. Grybauskas, F. Dalla Lana, Kiersten A. Wise, Laurence V. Madden, Marcia McMullen, and William W. Kirk
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0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,Fusarium ,biology ,Plant Science ,Strobilurins ,biology.organism_classification ,01 natural sciences ,Demethylation ,Fungicides, Industrial ,Fungicide ,03 medical and health sciences ,Horticulture ,030104 developmental biology ,Head blight ,Trichothecenes ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Triticum ,Plant Diseases ,010606 plant biology & botany - Abstract
Field trials were conducted in 17 U.S. states to evaluate the effects of quinone outside inhibitor (QoI) and demethylation inhibitor (DMI) fungicide programs on Fusarium head blight index (IND) and deoxynivalenol (DON) toxin in wheat. Four DMI-only treatments applied at Feekes 10.5.1, five QoI-only treatments applied between Feekes 9 or Feekes 10.5, three QoI+DMI mixtures applied at Feekes 10.5, and three treatments consisting of a QoI at Feekes 9 followed by a DMI at Feekes 10.5.1 were evaluated. Network meta-analytical models were fitted to log-transformed mean IND and DON data and estimated contrasts of log means were used to obtain estimates of mean percent controls relative to the nontreated check as measures of efficacy. Results from the meta-analyses were also used to assess the risk of DON increase in future trials. DMI at Feekes 10.5.1 were the most effective programs against IND and DON and the least likely to increase DON in future trials. QoI-only programs increased mean DON over the nontreated checks and were the most likely to do so in future trials, particularly when applied at Feekes 10.5. The effects of QoI+DMI combinations depended on the active ingredients and whether the two were applied as a mixture at heading or sequentially. Following a Feekes 9 QoI application with a Feekes 10.5.1 application of a DMI reduced the negative effect of the QoI on DON but was not sufficient to achieve the efficacy of the Feekes 10.5.1 DMI-only treatments. Our results suggest that one must be prudent when using QoI treatments under moderate to high risk of FHB, particularly where the QoI is used without an effective DMI applied in combination or in sequence.
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- 2018
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23. Genome-wide association mapping for resistance to leaf rust, stripe rust and tan spot in wheat reveals potential candidate genes
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Jesse Poland, Ravi P. Singh, Philomin Juliana, Pawan K. Singh, Gary C. Bergstrom, Julio Huerta-Espino, Sridhar Bhavani, Mark E. Sorrells, and José Crossa
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Genetic Markers ,0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,Candidate gene ,Genotype ,Population ,Biology ,Plant disease resistance ,Genes, Plant ,01 natural sciences ,Rust ,Linkage Disequilibrium ,03 medical and health sciences ,Genetic linkage ,Genetics ,Association mapping ,education ,Genetic Association Studies ,Triticum ,Disease Resistance ,Plant Diseases ,Molecular breeding ,education.field_of_study ,Basidiomycota ,Chromosome Mapping ,food and beverages ,General Medicine ,Phenotype ,030104 developmental biology ,Genetic marker ,Linear Models ,Original Article ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,010606 plant biology & botany ,Biotechnology - Abstract
Key message Genome-wide association mapping in conjunction with population sequencing map and Ensembl plants was used to identify markers/candidate genes linked to leaf rust, stripe rust and tan spot resistance in wheat. Abstract Leaf rust (LR), stripe rust (YR) and tan spot (TS) are some of the important foliar diseases in wheat (Triticum aestivum L.). To identify candidate resistance genes for these diseases in CIMMYT’s (International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center) International bread wheat screening nurseries, we used genome-wide association studies (GWAS) in conjunction with information from the population sequencing map and Ensembl plants. Wheat entries were genotyped using genotyping-by-sequencing and phenotyped in replicated trials. Using a mixed linear model, we observed that seedling resistance to LR was associated with 12 markers on chromosomes 1DS, 2AS, 2BL, 3B, 4AL, 6AS and 6AL, and seedling resistance to TS was associated with 14 markers on chromosomes 1AS, 2AL, 2BL, 3AS, 3AL, 3B, 6AS and 6AL. Seedling and adult plant resistance (APR) to YR were associated with several markers at the distal end of chromosome 2AS. In addition, YR APR was also associated with markers on chromosomes 2DL, 3B and 7DS. The potential candidate genes for these diseases included several resistance genes, receptor-like serine/threonine-protein kinases and defense-related enzymes. However, extensive LD in wheat that decays at about 5 × 107 bps, poses a huge challenge for delineating candidate gene intervals and candidates should be further mapped, functionally characterized and validated. We also explored a segment on chromosome 2AS associated with multiple disease resistance and identified seventeen disease resistance linked genes. We conclude that identifying candidate genes linked to significant markers in GWAS is feasible in wheat, thus creating opportunities for accelerating molecular breeding. Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (10.1007/s00122-018-3086-6) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
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- 2018
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24. Population Genetics of
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Michael R, Fulcher, James B, Winans, Menchus, Quan, Eniola D, Oladipo, and Gary C, Bergstrom
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Gene Flow ,Genetics, Population ,Fusarium ,Genotype ,New York ,Genetic Variation ,Mycotoxins ,Poaceae ,Trichothecenes ,Triticum ,Plant Diseases - Published
- 2019
25. Differential Seed Infection of Wheat Cultivars by Stagonospora nodorum
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Gary C. Bergstrom, Mark E. Sorrells, and Denis A. Shah
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biology ,Inoculation ,fungi ,food and beverages ,Plant Science ,Fungi imperfecti ,Plant disease resistance ,biology.organism_classification ,Phaeosphaeria nodorum ,Agronomy ,Stagonospora ,Colonization ,Poaceae ,Cultivar ,Agronomy and Crop Science - Abstract
Seed of soft white winter wheat collected from New York regional cultivar trials in 1995 and 1996 were assayed on an agar medium selective for Stagonospora nodorum. Incidence of seed infection varied with production environment. Relative incidence of seed infection differed significantly among cultivars and was consistent across environments. The flag leaves and ears of 12 cultivars were inoculated quantitatively at flowering in a glasshouse. Cultivars did not differ significantly in disease on the flag leaves. Incidence of seed infection for all cultivars was above 60%, but was significantly lower in Delaware and Houser than in other cultivars. Results confirm that wheat cultivars differ in their relative susceptibility to seed infection by S. nodorum. Resistance in wheat to seed infection by S. nodorum may be a useful mechanism for reducing initial inoculum in areas where infected seed is considered the primary inoculum source for Stagonospora nodorum blotch.
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- 2019
26. Identification of Small Grains Genotypes Resistant to Soilborne wheat mosaic virus
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Mark E. Sorrells, Gary C. Bergstrom, L. Cadle-Davidson, and Stewart M. Gray
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Furovirus ,Veterinary medicine ,biology ,business.industry ,Plant Science ,Triticale ,Plant disease resistance ,biology.organism_classification ,Biotechnology ,Plant virus ,Genotype ,Soil-borne wheat mosaic virus ,Cultivar ,Wheat mosaic virus ,business ,Agronomy and Crop Science - Abstract
Soilborne wheat mosaic virus (SBWMV) was detected in New York in 1998 for the first time and has been associated with yield loss where identified. We assessed 115 regionally adapted small grains genotypes for resistance to SBWMV over four growing seasons. Resistance to SBWMV reduces the percentage of plants that develop detectable viral titer and symptoms. Logistic regression was used to analyze disease incidence data and was compared with a general linear model for categorizing relative resistance to SBWMV. Logistic regression facilitated assessment of the effects of small sample size, low disease incidence, and nonuniform disease distribution. By increasing sample size from 20 to 30 stems per replicate, the number of resistance categories was increased through improved resolution of intermediate resistance classes. In environments with low disease incidence, the number of genotypes categorized as susceptible decreased while intermediate genotypes appeared to be resistant in the analysis. Inclusion of disease distribution data as covariates in a spatially balanced experiment did not increase the power of the logistic analysis. No genotype assessed in multiple years was immune to infection. However, 41 of the regionally adapted genotypes tested repeatedly expressed strong resistance to SBWMV, providing growers a choice of cultivars resistant to SBWMV.
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- 2019
27. Distribution, Impact, and Soil Environment of Phoma sclerotioides in Northeastern U.S. Alfalfa Fields
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Gary C. Bergstrom, Robert R. Schindelbeck, M. J. Wunsch, and H. M. van Es
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Horticulture ,biology ,Phoma sclerotioides ,Root rot ,Phoma ,Plant Science ,Fungi imperfecti ,Fungal pathogen ,Pycnidium ,Pathogenicity ,biology.organism_classification ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Conidium - Abstract
We report brown root rot (BRR) of alfalfa, caused by the fungal pathogen Phoma sclerotioides, for the first time in the eastern United States. Alfalfa production fields in New York, Vermont, and New Hampshire were sampled in spring 2005, and soil characteristics were related to variability in BRR incidence and severity in two New York fields sampled extensively. BRR was detected in 8 of 10 fields sampled in New York, 6 of 7 fields sampled in Vermont, and 5 of 6 fields sampled in New Hampshire. Lesions on both roots and crowns were common in all three states, and most BRR lesions extended into the cortical tissues. Diagnostic polymerase chain reaction (PCR) of P. sclerotioides isolates produced a single amplicon of the expected size. In vivo conidia and pycnidia morphology of northeastern isolates was consistent with published descriptions of P. sclerotioides, and P. sclerotioides was reisolated from symptomatic lesions after pathogenicity testing. In two New York fields sampled extensively, BRR severity varied with soil strength, soil texture, soil saturation, and alfalfa stand density. The spatial pattern of BRR within fields suggests the pathogen was not recently introduced. The results suggest BRR is widespread in alfalfa production fields in New York, Vermont, and New Hampshire.
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- 2019
28. First Report of Brown Root Rot of Alfalfa Caused by Phoma sclerotioides in Colorado and New Mexico
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M. A. Dillon, Gary C. Bergstrom, R. Torres, Howard F. Schwartz, and M. J. Wunsch
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biology ,Ecology ,fungi ,food and beverages ,Plant Science ,Fungal pathogen ,Disease distribution ,biology.organism_classification ,Agronomy ,Phoma sclerotioides ,Root rot ,Plenodomus meliloti ,Medicago sativa ,Agronomy and Crop Science - Abstract
Brown root rot (BRR), caused by the fungal pathogen Phoma sclerotioides G. Preuss ex Sacc. (synonym Plenodomus meliloti Dearn. & G.B. Sanford), is associated with winterkill, slow emergence from winter dormancy, and yield loss of alfalfa (Medicago sativa L.) (1,2). BRR is a problem in regions with severe winters and is common in Alaska and Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba, Canada. It was first observed in the continental United States in Wyoming during 1996 (2) and has subsequently been found in Idaho, Minnesota, Montana, New Hampshire, New York, Vermont, and Wisconsin. In the intermountain valleys of northern New Mexico and western Colorado, winters can be severe; alfalfa winterkill events occur periodically, but it is unknown if BRR is present. In May 2006, alfalfa plants were collected from production fields in Huerfano, Otero, and Rio Grande counties in Colorado and Rio Arriba and Taos counties in New Mexico and assessed for BRR. Two to three fields were sampled per county and 20 or 40 plants were collected per field. All fields existed for at least two winters. Fields sampled in Rio Grande County exhibited severe winterkill, with most plants completely girdled by crown lesions. Plants from other fields exhibited a range of root and crown rots. Isolation of P. sclerotioides was attempted from all plants with a previously described protocol (4). The pathogen was isolated from crown lesions of one alfalfa plant each from Rio Grande and Taos counties. Both lesions extended into the cortex. On potato dextrose agar and water agar with barley (4), single-conidium cultures of each isolate produced large pycnidia (0.35 to 0.80 mm in diameter) with multiple beaks, white cirri darkening to yellow with age, and unicellular, hyaline, ovoid conidia 5 to 7 μm long by 2 μm wide. Diagnostic PCR of the cultures using P. sclerotioides-specific primers (3) resulted in a single amplicon of expected size (500 bp). The internal transcribed spacer (ITS) 1, 5.8S, and ITS2 of the rDNA were amplified and sequenced using primers ITS1 and ITS4. The ITS sequences (GenBank Accession Nos. EU265669 and EU265670) were >98% identical to P. sclerotioides ATCC isolate 56515 over 503 bp of aligned sequence. Potted ‘Vernal’ alfalfa was inoculated 4 months after seeding, kept at 4°C for 5.5 weeks, 0 to –2°C for 12 weeks, and 4°C for 3 weeks. Of the 14 plants inoculated with the Colorado isolate, 11 developed cortical lesions and 8 winterkilled. Of the 23 plants inoculated with the New Mexico isolate, 22 developed cortical lesions and 16 winterkilled. Lesions were light to very dark brown, sometimes with a darker border and often containing abundant pycnidia. Winterkill was associated with lesions girdling the crown. P. sclerotioides was isolated from the lesions. To our knowledge, this is the southernmost report of BRR in North America and the first report of BRR in New Mexico and Colorado. The incidence and severity of BRR in the region surveyed appear to be considerably lower than in the more northern regions. References: (1) B. Berkenkamp et al. Can. J. Plant Sci. 71:211, 1991. (2) C. R. Hollingsworth et al. Can. J. Plant Pathol. 25:215, 2003. (3) R. C. Larsen et al. Plant Dis. 86:928, 2002. (4) M. J. Wunsch et al. Plant Dis. 91:1293, 2007.
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- 2019
29. Local Distance of Wheat Spike Infection by Released Clones of Gibberella zeae Disseminated from Infested Corn Residue
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Gary C. Bergstrom, David G. Schmale, Melissa D. Keller, and K. D. Waxman
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Fusarium ,Residue (complex analysis) ,biology ,Ascomycota ,food and beverages ,Plant Science ,Fungus ,biology.organism_classification ,Horticulture ,Gibberella zeae ,Agronomy ,Head blight ,Genotype ,Poaceae ,Agronomy and Crop Science - Abstract
Knowledge of the movement of Gibberella zeae (Fusarium graminearum) from a local source of inoculum in infested cereal debris is critical to the management of Fusarium head blight (FHB) of wheat. Previous spatial dissemination and infection studies were unable to completely distinguish the contributions of released inocula from those of background inocula. Clones of G. zeae were released and recaptured in five wheat fields in New York and Virginia in 2007 and 2008. Amplified fragment length polymorphisms were used to track and unambiguously identify the released clones in heterogeneous populations of the fungus recovered from infected wheat spikes collected at 0, 3, 6, and ≥24 m from small-area sources of infested corn residues. The percent recovery of the released clones decreased significantly at fairly short distances from the inoculum sources. Isolates of G. zeae recovered at 0, 3, 6, and ≥24 m from the center of source areas shared 65, 19, 13, and 5% of the genotypes of the released clones, respectively. More importantly, the incidence of spike infection attributable to released clones averaged 15, 2, 1, and
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- 2019
30. First Report of Anthracnose Caused by Colletotrichum caudatum on Indiangrass in New York
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K. D. Waxman and Gary C. Bergstrom
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Perennial plant ,fungi ,food and beverages ,Forage ,Plant Science ,Biology ,Pathogenicity ,biology.organism_classification ,Horticulture ,Botany ,Colletotrichum caudatum ,Fungal morphology ,Cultivar ,Sorghastrum nutans ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Biofuel crop - Abstract
Indiangrass or yellow indiangrass (Sorghastrum nutans L.) is a warm-season, perennial grass grown for livestock forage, erosion control, wildlife food and cover, landscaping, and more recently, as a biofuel crop. In August of 2007, foliar lesions were observed on plants within mature stands of a number of cultivars and populations of indiangrass at the USDA-NRCS Plant Materials Center in Big Flats (Chemung County), NY. In subsequent years, similar lesions were observed in both mature and immature (less than 3 years old) stands of indiangrass in Chemung and Tompkins counties. Lesions were elliptical to irregular with distinct or diffuse purple margins often surrounded by tan-to-maroon halos and were sometimes observed on the leaf sheath and stem. Lesions were generally less than 2 cm long, approximately 2 mm wide, and often coalesced when disease was severe. Centers became necrotic and often developed numerous acervuli with black setae. After 2 to 5 days of incubation in moist chambers, symptomatic leaf tissue developed acervuli containing masses of cream-colored spores. Spores streaked onto potato dextrose agar containing streptomycin gave rise to cultures with gray mycelium often accompanied by sporulating avervuli. The fungus was identified as Colletotrichum caudatum (Peck ex Sacc.) Peck on the basis of cultural characteristics and conidial morphology (2). Conidia were one celled, hyaline, fusiform, and falcate with a filiform, caudate appendage. Conidial length averaged 28 μm (21 to 45 μm), width averaged 5 μm (4 to 6 μm), and the appendage averaged 15 μm (5 to 29 μm) long. The sequence of the rDNA internal transcribed spacer (ITS) regions of an isolate from ‘Rumsey’ indiangrass in Chemung County, NY (Cc004NY07, GenBank Accession No. JF437056) exhibited 98% nucleotide identity to C. caudatum isolates (GenBank Accession Nos. AB042304 and AB042305) collected from bentgrass (Agrostis sp. L.) and cogongrass (Imperata cylindrica L.) in Japan (1). Colletotrichum species from grasses are not discriminated solely on ITS sequence, but the unique caudate appendage is diagnostic of C. caudatum. Pathogenicity of the sequenced isolate plus a second isolate from ‘Rumsey’ indiangrass (Cc006NY07) was evaluated in greenhouse experiments. Eight-week-old plants of indiangrass population ‘PA Ecotype’ (Ernst Conservation Seeds, Meadville, PA) were inoculated with conidial suspensions (2 × 106 conidia/ml) of C. caudatum. Twelve plants were sprayed with either inoculum or sterile water (as the control treatment) until runoff with a spray bottle. After inoculum had dried, plants were placed in a mist chamber for 48 h. Plants were then returned to the greenhouse and observed for disease development, which occurred within 1 week of inoculation. No symptoms developed on the control plants. Foliar lesions closely resembled those observed in the field. C. caudatum was reisolated consistently from symptomatic tissue collected from greenhouse experiments. To our knowledge, this is the first report of C. caudatum causing anthracnose on indiangrass in New York, though it has been reported in the adjoining states of New Jersey (2) and Pennsylvania (3). Indiangrass cultivars should be assessed for susceptibility to regional isolates of C. caudatum prior to expanded regional production of indiangrass as a biofuel crop. References: (1) J. Moriwaki et al. J. Gen. Plant Pathol. 68:307, 2002. (2) T. R. Nag Raj. Can. J. Bot. 51:2463, 1973. (3) K. E. Zeiders. Plant Dis. 71:348, 1987.
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- 2019
31. First Report of a Leaf Spot Caused by Bipolaris oryzae on Switchgrass in New York
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Gary C. Bergstrom and K. D. Waxman
- Subjects
biology ,Perennial plant ,Inoculation ,fungi ,food and beverages ,Plant Science ,biology.organism_classification ,Conidium ,Botany ,Panicum virgatum ,Potato dextrose agar ,Leaf spot ,Cultivar ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Mycelium - Abstract
Switchgrass (Panicum virgatum L.) is a perennial grass with biofuel potential. From 2007 to 2010, foliar lesions were observed on first year and mature stands of switchgrass in various locations in New York. Foliar lesions were purple, elliptical (up to 1 cm) with either distinct or diffuse margins, and occasionally with yellow halos and/or white necrotic centers. After 2 to 5 days of moist chamber incubation, surface-sterilized, symptomatic leaf tissue produced conidia that when streaked onto potato dextrose agar containing 0.3 g of streptomycin per liter gave rise to cultures with gray-to-black mycelium that developed brown conidia. The fungus was identified as Bipolaris oryzae (Breda de Haan) Shoemaker on the basis of conidial morphology (1,2). Conidiophores were brown, straight, cylindrical, and multiseptate. Conidia were brown, curved, ellipsoidal tapering to rounded ends, with 3 to 14 septa. Conidia averaged 105 μm (54 to 160 μm) long and 16 μm (12 to 20 μm) wide. Sequences of the glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GDP) gene of three isolates from Tompkins County (Cornell Accession and corresponding GenBank Nos.: Bo005NY07 [cv. Cave-in-Rock], JF521648; Bo006NY07 [cv. Kanlow], JF521649; and Bo038NY07 [cv. Shawnee], JF521650) exhibited 100% nucleotide identity to B. oryzae isolates (GenBank Nos. AY277282–AY277285) collected from switchgrass in North Dakota (1). Sequences of the rDNA internal transcribed spacer (ITS) regions of the isolates (Cornell Accession and corresponding GenBank Nos.: Bo005NY07, JF693908; Bo006NY07, JF693909; and Bo038NY07, JF693910) exhibited 100% nucleotide identity to B. oryzae isolates (GenBank Nos. GU222690–GU222693) collected from switchgrass in Mississippi (3). Pathogenicity of two of the sequenced isolates (Bo006NY07 and Bo038NY07) along with one other isolate (Bo116NY09 from ‘Cave-in-Rock’ in Cayuga County) was evaluated in the greenhouse. Six- to eight-week-old switchgrass plants were inoculated with conidial suspensions (40,000 conidia/ml) of B. oryzae. Inoculum or sterilized water was applied until runoff. There were three plants per treatment of each of ‘Blackwell’, ‘Carthage’, ‘Cave-in-Rock’, ‘Kanlow’, ‘Shawnee’, ‘Shelter’, and ‘Sunburst’. After inoculum had dried, plants were placed in a mist chamber for 24 h and then returned to the greenhouse. Symptoms developed 2 to 4 days after inoculation for all cultivars. No symptoms developed on the control plants. Foliar lesions closely resembled those observed in the field. B. oryzae was consistently reisolated from symptomatic tissue collected from greenhouse experiments. B. oryzae was first reported as a pathogen of switchgrass in North Dakota (1) and more recently in Mississippi (3). To our knowledge, this is the first report of B. oryzae causing a leaf spot on switchgrass in New York. Observation of severe leaf spot in several field plots suggests that switchgrass populations should be screened for their reaction to regional isolates of B. oryzae prior to expanded production of switchgrass as a biofuel crop. References: (1) J. M. Krupinsky et al. Can. J. Plant Pathol. 26:371 2004. (2) R. A. Shoemaker. Can. J. Bot. 37:883, 1959. (3) M. Tomaso-Peterson and C. J. Balbalian. Plant Dis. 94:643 2010.
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- 2019
32. Outbreaks of Smut Caused by Tilletia maclaganii on Switchgrass in New York and Pennsylvania
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C. N. Layton and Gary C. Bergstrom
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Perennial plant ,Agronomy ,biology ,Smut ,Ornamental plant ,Biomass ,Panicum virgatum ,Plant Science ,Cultivar ,biology.organism_classification ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Caryopsis ,Panicle - Abstract
Switchgrass (Panicum virgatum L.) is a native perennial grass with potential as a biofuel crop. The smut fungus, Tilletia maclaganii (Berk.) Clint., is associated with significant biomass reduction in switchgrass in the Midwest (4), but has not been reported in the northeast United States in more than 60 years (New York in 1890 and Pennsylvania in 1946) (2,3). From 2007 to 2010, smutted panicles were observed on the majority of plants in stands of several switchgrass cultivars at the USDA-NRCS Plant Materials Center in Big Flats (Chemung County), NY; in production fields of several switchgrass cultivars near Meadville (Crawford County), PA; and in an ornamental bed of switchgrass in Ithaca (Tompkins County), NY. Smutted panicles emerged 3 to 4 weeks prior to healthy panicles, had a compact, club-shaped appearance, and enlarged florets with swollen ovaries that readily released a powdery mass of odorless, rusty orange-to-dark brown teliospores when pinched. The entire caryopsis of every floret within a panicle was smutted and the infected plants appeared stunted, indicative of systemic infection. The fungus from each location was identified as T. maclaganii based on host, habit, and teliospore morphology (3). Teliospores were pale yellowish brown to reddish brown, varied from globose to slightly irregular in shape, and averaged 21 μm (18 to 25 μm) in diameter. The exospore was thick (2 to 3 μm), finely verrucose, and no sheath was present. True sterile cells, pale yellow and 10 to 18 μm in diameter, were sparsely present. Teliospores germinated and formed large (40 to 60 × 3 to 6 μm), nonconjugating basidiospores within 20 h on 2% water agar (WA). Occasionally, we also found the floret-infecting species T. pulcherrima (1) on switchgrass at very low incidence in Big Flats, NY, but it was easily distinguished from T. maclaganii. Stratified seeds (3 g) of ‘Shelter’, washed and found to be free of teliospores, were dusted with 0.04 g of teliospores of T. maclaganii isolate Tm001NY09 (Cornell Plant Pathology Herbarium Accession CUP-67931) harvested from infected ‘Shelter’ in Big Flats, NY in 2009. Inoculated and noninoculated seeds were sown in seedling trays, transplanted, and evaluated at panicle emergence. There were no symptoms on plants from noninoculated seeds. Symptoms on inoculated plants were consistent with field observations and teliospores were reisolated from infected panicles and cultured on 2% WA. Teliospores harvested from a single panicle infected with Tm001NY09 were used for culturing and DNA extraction. The fully annotated sequence of the rDNA internal transcribed spacer and 5.8S regions of this isolate were deposited in GenBank (Accession No. JF745116). Smut outbreaks in New York and Pennsylvania suggest that T. maclaganii must be managed effectively if switchgrass production is to be sustainable in the Northeast. References: (1) L. M. Carris et al. Plant Dis. 92:1707, 2008. (2) R. Durán and G. W. Fischer. The Genus Tilletia. Washington State University, Pullman, WA, 1961. (3) D. F. Farr and A. Y. Rossman. Fungal Databases. Systematic Mycology and Microbiology Laboratory, ARS, USDA. Retrieved from http://nt.ars-grin.gov/fungaldatabases/ , May 3, 2011 (4) P. M. Thomsen et al. Online publication. doi:10.1094/PHP-2008-0317-01-RS. Plant Health Progress, 2008.
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- 2019
33. First Report of Anthracnose Caused by Colletotrichum navitas on Switchgrass in New York
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K. D. Waxman and Gary C. Bergstrom
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biology ,Perennial plant ,Inoculation ,Plant Science ,biology.organism_classification ,Pathogenicity ,Conidium ,Horticulture ,Graminicola ,Mycology ,Botany ,Panicum virgatum ,Cultivar ,Agronomy and Crop Science - Abstract
Switchgrass (Panicum virgatum L.) is a perennial grass with significant potential as a biofuel crop. From 2007 to 2010, foliar lesions were observed in new and mature stands of switchgrass in various locations in New York. Lesions were elliptical with purple margins and white necrotic centers, generally 20-year-old naturalized stand of switchgrass in Steuben County), JF437053; Cn080NY08 (from ‘Pathfinder’ in Chemung County), JF437054; and Cn101NY09 (from ‘Blackwell’ in Chemung County), JF437055) exhibited 100% nucleotide identity to the type isolate of C. nativas (GenBank No. GQ919068) collected from switchgrass selection ‘Brooklyn’ in New Jersey (1). Pathogenicity of the sequenced isolates along with seven other isolates (Cn105NY09 from ‘Sunburst’ in Tompkins County; Cn107NY09 from ‘Trailblazer’ in Tompkins County; Cn109NY09 from ‘Forestburg’ in Tompkins County; Cn111NY09 and Cn112NY09 from ‘Shelter’ in Tompkins County; and Cn122NY09 and Cn123NY09 from ‘Cave-in-Rock’ in Genesee County) was evaluated in greenhouse experiments. Seven- to eight-week-old switchgrass plants were inoculated with conidial suspensions (1 × 106 conidia/ml) of C. nativas. Inoculum or sterilized water was sprayed until runoff. Three plants of each of ‘Cave-in-Rock’ and ‘Kanlow’ were sprayed per treatment and the experiment was repeated for 3 of the 10 isolates. Inoculated plants were placed in a mist chamber for 48 h before they were returned to the greenhouse and observed for disease development, which occurred within 1 week of inoculation for both cultivars. No symptoms developed on the control plants. Foliar lesions closely resembled those observed in the field. C. nativas was consistently reisolated from symptomatic tissue collected from greenhouse experiments. Switchgrass anthracnose associated with C. graminicola sensu lata has been reported in many U.S. states (2). On the basis of molecular phylogenetics and distinguishing morphological characters, Crouch et al. erected C. navitas as a novel species distinct from C. graminicola sensu stricto, a taxon restricted to the corn anthracnose pathogen (1). C. nativas was first documented on switchgrass in New Jersey (1) and appears to be the same pathogen causing anthracnose of switchgrass in the adjoining state of Pennsylvania (1,3). To our knowledge, this is the first report of C. nativas causing anthracnose of switchgrass in New York. References: (1) J. A. Crouch et al. Mycol. Res. 113:1411, 2009. (2) D. F. Farr and A. Y. Rossman. Fungal Databases, Systematic Mycology and Microbiology Laboratory, ARS, USDA. Retrieved from http://nt.ars-grin.gov/fungaldatabases/ , May 5, 2011. (3) M. A. Sanderson et al. Agron. J. 100:510, 2008.
- Published
- 2019
34. A Unified Effort to Fight an Enemy of Wheat and Barley: Fusarium Head Blight
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Don Hershman, Gary C. Bergstrom, Dave Van Sanford, Greg Shaner, Ruth Dill-Macky, Erick D. De Wolf, and Marcia McMullen
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Fusarium ,Crop ,Agronomy ,biology ,Head blight ,food and beverages ,Plant Science ,Land area ,biology.organism_classification ,China ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Plant disease ,Export market - Abstract
Wheat and barley are critical food and feed crops around the world. Wheat is grown on more land area worldwide than any other crop. In the United States, production of wheat and barley contributes to domestic food and feed use, and contributes to the export market and balance of trade. Fifteen years ago, Plant Disease published a feature article titled “Scab of wheat and barley: A re-emerging disease of devastating impact”. That article described the series of severe Fusarium head blight (FHB) epidemics that occurred in the United States and Canada, primarily from 1991 through 1996, with emphasis on the unparalleled economic and sociological impacts caused by the 1993 FHB epidemic in spring grains in the Northern Great Plains region. Earlier publications had dealt with the scope and damage caused by this disease in the United States, Canada, Europe, and China. Reviews published after 1997 further described this disease and its impact on North American grain production in the 1990s. This article reviews the disease and documents the information on U.S. FHB epidemics since 1997. The primary goal of this article is to summarize a sustained, coordinated, and collaborative research program that was put in place shortly after the 1993 epidemic, a program intended to quickly lead to improved management strategies and outreach implementation. This program serves as a model to deal with other emerging plant disease threats.
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- 2019
35. Understanding Yield Loss and Pathogen Biology to Improve Disease Management: Septoria Nodorum Blotch - A Case Study in Wheat
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Guro Brodal, Andrea Ficke, Christina Cowger, and Gary C. Bergstrom
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0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,biology ,Yield (finance) ,fungi ,food and beverages ,Agriculture ,Plant Science ,biology.organism_classification ,01 natural sciences ,Models, Biological ,Fungicides, Industrial ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,Septoria ,Agronomy ,Ascomycota ,Disease management (agriculture) ,Subject areas ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Pathogen ,Triticum ,010606 plant biology & botany ,Disease Resistance ,Plant Diseases - Abstract
The estimated potential yield losses caused by plant pathogens is up to 16% globally and most research in plant pathology aims to reduce yield loss in our crops directly or indirectly. Yield losses caused by a certain disease depend not only on disease severity, but also on the weather factors, the pathogen’s aggressiveness, and the ability of the crop to compensate for reduced photosynthetic area. The yield loss-disease relationship in a certain host-pathogen system might therefore change from year to year, making predictions for yield loss very difficult at the regional or even at the farmer’s level. However, estimating yield losses is essential to determine disease management thresholds at which acute control measures such as fungicide applications, or strategic measures such as crop rotation or use of resistant cultivars are economically and environmentally sensible. Legislation in many countries enforces implementation of integrated pest management (IPM), based on economic thresholds at which the costs due to a disease justify the costs for its management. Without a better understanding of the relationship between disease epidemiology and yield loss, we remain insufficiently equipped to design adequate IPM strategies that will be widely adapted in agriculture. Crop loss studies are resource demanding and difficult to interpret for one particular disease, as crops are usually not invaded by only one pest or pathogen at a time. Combining our knowledge on disease epidemiology, crop physiology, yield development, damage mechanisms involved, and the effect of management practices can help us to increase our understanding of the disease-crop loss relationship. The main aim of this paper is to review and analyze the literature on a representative host-pathogen relationship in an important staple food crop to identify knowledge gaps and research areas to better assess yield loss and design management strategies based on economic thresholds.
- Published
- 2019
36. First Report of Puccinia coronata var. coronata sensu stricto Infecting Alder Buckthorn in the United States
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Shawn C. Kenaley, Gary C. Bergstrom, and Geoffrey Ecker
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Puccinia coronata ,biology ,Phylogenetic tree ,Host (biology) ,Botany ,Rust (fungus) ,Plant Science ,Horticulture ,biology.organism_classification ,Alder ,Sensu stricto - Abstract
Field symptoms, host distribution, pathogen morphology, and phylogenetic analyses clearly demonstrated that the rust fungus infecting alder buckthorn in Connecticut is Puccinia coronata var. coronata sensu stricto. To our knowledge, this is the first report and confirmation of P. coronata var. coronata s.s. in the United States. Additional collections from purported aecial and telial hosts of P. coronata var. coronata s.s. are necessary to determine its host range, geographic distribution, and incidence within the United States and elsewhere in North America.
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- 2017
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37. First Report of Fusarium armeniacum Causing Fusarium Head Blight of Wheat in New York
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Gary C. Bergstrom and Michael Robert Fulcher
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Fusarium ,Horticulture ,Fusarium armeniacum ,biology ,Head blight ,Plant Science ,biology.organism_classification ,Agronomy and Crop Science - Published
- 2020
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38. Integrated Effects of Genetic Resistance and Prothioconazole + Tebuconazole Application Timing on Fusarium Head Blight in Wheat
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Ruth Dill-Macky, M. Nagelkirk, Julie Stevens, Pierce A. Paul, Dalitso N. Yabwalo, Kiersten A. Wise, Jaime A. Cummings, Madeleine J. Smith, Adam M. Byrne, Andrew Friskop, Jorge David Salgado, Carl A. Bradley, Emmanuel Byamukama, Venkataramana Chapara, M. I. Chilvers, Gary C. Bergstrom, Nathan M. Kleczewski, Stephen N. Wegulo, and Laurence V. Madden
- Subjects
Fusarium ,biology ,Genetic resistance ,Inoculation ,Plant Science ,Triazoles ,biology.organism_classification ,Fungicides, Industrial ,Fungicide ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Test weight ,Horticulture ,Anthesis ,chemistry ,Cultivar ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Triticum ,Tebuconazole ,Disease Resistance ,Plant Diseases - Abstract
Integrated Fusarium head blight (FHB) management programs consisting of different combinations of cultivar resistance class and an application of the fungicide prothioconazole + tebuconazole at or after 50% early anthesis were evaluated for efficacy against FHB incidence (INC; percentage of diseased spikes), index (IND; percentage of diseased spikelets per spike), Fusarium damaged kernel (FDK), deoxynivalenol (DON) toxin contamination, grain yield, and test weight (TW) in inoculated field trials conducted in 11 U.S. states in 2014 and 2015. Mean log response ratios and corresponding percent control values for INC, IND, FDK, and DON, and mean differences in yield and TW relative to a nontreated, inoculated susceptible check (S_CK), were estimated through network meta-analyses as measures of efficacy. Results from the analyses were then used to estimate the economic benefit of each management program for a range of grain prices and fungicide applications costs. Management programs consisting of a moderately resistant (MR) cultivar treated with the fungicide were the most efficacious, reducing INC by 60 to 69%, IND by 71 to 76%, FDK by 66 to 72%, and DON by 60 to 64% relative to S_CK, compared with 56 to 62% for INC, 68 to 72% for IND, 66 to 68% for FDK, and 58 to 61% for DON for programs with a moderately susceptible (MS) cultivar. The least efficacious programs were those with a fungicide application to a susceptible (S) cultivar, with less than a 45% reduction of INC, IND, FDK, or DON. All programs were more efficacious under conditions favorable for FHB compared with less favorable conditions, with applications made at 50% early anthesis being of comparable efficacy to those made 2 to 7 days later. Programs with an MS cultivar resulted in the highest mean yield increases relative to S_CK (541 to 753 kg/ha), followed by programs with an S cultivar (386 to 498 kg/ha) and programs with an MR cultivar (250 to 337 kg/ha). Integrated management programs with an MS or MR cultivar treated with the fungicide at or after 50% early anthesis were the most likely to result in a 50 or 75% control of IND, FDK, or DON in a future trial. At a fixed fungicide application cost, these programs were $4 to $319/MT more economically beneficial than corresponding fungicide-only programs, depending on the cultivar and grain price. These findings demonstrate the benefits of combining genetic resistance with a prothioconazole + tebuconazole treatment to manage FHB, even if that treatment is applied a few days after 50% early anthesis.
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- 2018
39. Effects of Pre- and Postanthesis Applications of Demethylation Inhibitor Fungicides on Fusarium Head Blight and Deoxynivalenol in Spring and Winter Wheat
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Paul D. Esker, Carl A. Bradley, Marcia McMullen, Gary C. Bergstrom, Kay Ruden, Arvydas P. Grybauskas, Ruth Dill-Macky, Eugene A. Milus, Kiersten A. Wise, William W. Kirk, Laurence V. Madden, Felipe Dalla Lana, and Pierce A. Paul
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,Fusarium ,biology ,Winter wheat ,Plant Science ,Triazoles ,biology.organism_classification ,01 natural sciences ,Demethylation ,Fungicides, Industrial ,Fungicide ,03 medical and health sciences ,Horticulture ,030104 developmental biology ,Anthesis ,Head blight ,Optimum growth ,Trichothecenes ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Triticum ,010606 plant biology & botany ,Plant Diseases - Abstract
Anthesis is generally recommended as the optimum growth stage for applying a foliar fungicide to manage Fusarium head blight (FHB) and the Fusarium-associated toxin deoxynivalenol (DON) in wheat. However, because it is not always possible to treat fields at anthesis, studies were conducted to evaluate pre- and postanthesis treatment options for managing FHB and DON in spring and winter wheat. Network meta-analytical models were fitted to data from 19 years of fungicide trials, and log response ratio ([Formula: see text]) and approximate percent control ([Formula: see text]) relative to a nontreated check were estimated as measures of the effects of six treatments on FHB index (IND: mean percentage of diseased spikelets per spike) and DON. The evaluated treatments consisted of either Caramba (metconazole) applied early (at heading [CE]), at anthesis (CA), or late (5 to 7 days after anthesis; CL), or Prosaro (prothioconazole + tebuconazole) applied at the same three times and referred to as PE, PA, and PL, respectively. All treatments reduced mean IND and DON relative to the nontreated check, but the magnitude of the effect varied with timing and wheat type. CA and PA resulted in the highest [Formula: see text] values for IND, 52.2 and 51.5%, respectively, compared with 45.9% for CL, 41.3% for PL, and less than 33% for CE and PE. Anthesis and postanthesis treatments reduced mean IND by 14.9 to 29.7% relative to preanthesis treatments. The estimated effect size was also statistically significant for comparisons between CA and CL and PA and PL; CA reduced IND by 11.7% relative to CL, whereas PA reduced the disease by 17.4% relative to PL. Differences in efficacy against IND between pairs of prothioconazole + tebuconazole and metconazole treatments applied at the same timing (CE versus PE, CA versus PA, and CL versus PL) were not statistically significant. However, CA and CL outperformed PA and PL by 7 and 12.8%, respectively, in terms of efficacy against DON. All application programs had comparable efficacy against IND between spring and winter wheat types, but efficacy against DON was 10 to 16% greater for spring than winter wheat for applications made at or after anthesis. All programs led to an increase in mean grain yield and test weight relative to the nontreated check.
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- 2018
40. Malting of Fusarium Head Blight-Infected Rye (
- Author
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Zhao, Jin, James, Gillespie, John, Barr, Jochum J, Wiersma, Mark E, Sorrells, Steve, Zwinger, Thomas, Gross, Jaime, Cumming, Gary C, Bergstrom, Robert, Brueggeman, Richard D, Horsley, and Paul B, Schwarz
- Subjects
Food Handling ,Secale ,phenolics ,type B trichothecenes ,Food Contamination ,Tri5 DNA ,Article ,rye ,variety ,Fusarium ,viscosity ,malting quality ,Trichothecenes ,environment ,Plant Diseases - Abstract
This project was initiated with the goal of investigating the malt quality of winter rye cultivars and hybrids grown in the United States in 2014 and 2015, but high levels of deoxynivalenol (DON) were subsequently found in many of the malt samples. DON levels in 75% of the investigated rye samples (n = 117) were actually below 1.0 mg/kg, as quantified by a gas chromatography combined with electron capture detector (GC-ECD). However, 83% of the samples had DON in excess of 1.0 mg/kg following malting, and the average DON level in malted rye was 10.6 mg/kg. In addition, relatively high levels of 3-acetate DON (3-ADON), 15-acetate DON (15-ADON), nivalenol (NIV), and DON-3-glucoside (D3G) were observed in some rye malts. Our results show that rye grain DON is likely a poor predicator of type B trichothecenes in malt in practice, because high levels of malt DON, 15-ADONm and D3G were produced, even when the rye samples with DON levels below 0.50 mg/kg were processed. Fusarium Tri5 DNA content in rye was highly associated with malt DON levels (r = 0.83) in a small subset of samples (n = 55). The impact of Fusarium infection on malt quality was demonstrated by the significant correlations between malt DON levels and wort viscosity, β-glucan content, wort color, wort p-coumaric acid content, and total phenolic content. Additional correlations of rye Fusarium Tri5 DNA contents with malt diastatic power (DP), wort free amino nitrogen (FAN) content, and arabinoxylan content were observed.
- Published
- 2018
41. First Report of Sudden Death Syndrome of Soybean Caused by Fusarium virguliforme in New York
- Author
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Kevin Myers, Gary C. Bergstrom, and Jaime A. Cummings
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0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,Sudden Death Syndrome ,Plant Science ,Biology ,01 natural sciences ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Virology ,Fusarium virguliforme ,010606 plant biology & botany - Published
- 2018
42. Disease Risk, Spatial Patterns, and Incidence-Severity Relationships of Fusarium Head Blight in No-till Spring Wheat Following Maize or Soybean
- Author
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José Maurício Cunha Fernandes, Denis A. Shah, Gary C. Bergstrom, Emerson M. Del Ponte, and Piérri Spolti
- Subjects
Fusarium ,No-till farming ,Agronomy ,Head blight ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Random pattern ,Spatial ecology ,Disease risk ,food and beverages ,Plant Science ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Agronomy and Crop Science - Abstract
The first large-scale survey of Fusarium head blight (FHB) in commercial wheat fields in southern Brazil was conducted over three years (2009 to 2011). The objectives were to: (i) evaluate whether increased FHB risk is associated with within-field maize residue; (ii) determine the spatial pattern of FHB incidence; and (iii) quantify the relationship between FHB incidence and severity. FHB was assessed in a total of 160 fields between early milk and dough. Incidence ranged from 1.0 to 89.9% (median = 25%) and severity from 0.02 to 18.6% (median = 1.3%). FHB risk was neither lower nor higher in wheat following maize than in wheat following soybean. Only 18% of fields were classified as having aggregated patterns of FHB-symptomatic spikes. A binary power law description of the variances was consistent with an overall random pattern of the disease. These results conform with the hypothesis that FHB epidemics in southern Brazil are driven by sufficient atmospherically-transported inoculum from regional sources. The incidence-severity relationship was coherent across growing season, growth stage, and previous crop; one common fitted curve described the relationship across all observations. Estimating severity from incidence may be useful in reducing the workload in epidemiological surveys.
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- 2015
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43. Trichothecene Genotype Composition of Fusarium graminearum Not Differentiated Among Isolates from Maize Stubble, Maize Ears, Wheat Spikes, and the Atmosphere in New York
- Author
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Emerson M. Del Ponte, Jaime A. Cummings, Piérri Spolti, Paulo R. Kuhnem, and Gary C. Bergstrom
- Subjects
Fusarium ,Genotype ,biology ,Atmosphere ,Trichothecene ,New York ,Agriculture ,Plant Science ,Fungus ,biology.organism_classification ,Zea mays ,Agronomy ,Composition (visual arts) ,Trichothecenes ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Triticum ,Plant Diseases - Abstract
In order to test the hypothesis that the trichothecene genotype composition of local populations of Fusarium graminearum is structured by specific habitats, a collection of 1,407 isolates was obtained from overwintered maize stubble, mature maize ears and wheat spikes, and the atmosphere 1.5 m aboveground during the flowering stage of these crops. These isolates were sampled at three diverse agricultural locations in New York State: namely, Aurora (sampled in 2012 and 2013) in central New York, Belmont (sampled in 2013) in southwestern New York, and Willsboro (sampled in 2013) in northeastern New York. Approximately 100 isolates of F. graminearum from each habitat were collected within a 10-mile2 area in each location. Polymerase chain reaction assays were used to identify three main B-trichothecene genotypes—3-acetyldeoxynivalenol (3-ADON), 15-ADON, or nivalenol (NIV)—based on amplification of portions of Tri3 and Tri12 genes. All but the NIV genotype were detected. The 15-ADON genotype predominated in most locations; frequencies were 92% (652/709) at Aurora, 78% (332/379) at Belmont, and 53% (167/319) at Willsboro. Frequencies of any genotype did not differ in general among the four habits in each location. An exception was in Aurora 2012, where only 5 in 24 3-ADON isolates were found in samplings from the air and grains of both crops. As viewed by the composition of trichothecene genotypes, local populations of F. graminearum appear not to be structured by these four habitats inclusive of pathogenic and saprophytic phases of the fungus life cycle. The similar frequency of 3-ADON and 15-ADON in eastern New York (Willsboro), which is less than 400 km away from the Aurora sampling location in the central area of the state, suggests that regional populations may be differentiated based on selection associated with climatic or landscape features not currently identified.
- Published
- 2015
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44. A Coordinated Effort to Manage Soybean Rust in North America: A Success Story in Soybean Disease Monitoring
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Martin I. Chilvers, G. Franc, Loren J. Giesler, John D. Mueller, J. Golod, Daren S. Mueller, Jason P. Bond, S. R. Koenning, John C. Rupe, Samuel G. Markell, Douglas J. Jardine, Craig R. Grau, Erick DeWolf, Barry J. Jacobsen, R. P. Mulrooney, Dean K. Malvick, M. A. C. Langham, Guy B. Padgett, J. Zidek, John P. Damicone, Travis Faske, M. A. Newman, S. Vaiciunas, S. Monfort, Raymond Hammerschmidt, Arvydas P. Grybauskas, Clayton A. Hollier, Kiersten A. Wise, Albert Tenuta, Nicholas S. Dufault, James J. Marois, Robert C. Kemerait, Glen L. Hartman, N. P. Goldberg, Paul D. Esker, Anne E. Dorrance, Erik L. Stromberg, H. Young-Kelly, Tom W. Allen, Thomas Isakeit, R. W. Schneider, Shree P. Singh, I. R. G. Gómez, Gregory Shaner, R. A. Henn, Laura Sweets, L. Osborne, Howard F. Schwartz, Carl A. Bradley, B. E. Ruden, D. E. Hershman, Xiao-Bing Yang, Edward J. Sikora, D. E. Brown-Rytlewski, Gary C. Bergstrom, and Scott A. Isard
- Subjects
Fusarium ,biology ,business.industry ,fungi ,food and beverages ,Distribution (economics) ,Plant Science ,biology.organism_classification ,Crop ,Agronomy ,Phakopsora pachyrhizi ,Yield (wine) ,Blight ,Downy mildew ,Soybean rust ,business ,Agronomy and Crop Science - Abstract
Existing crop monitoring programs determine the incidence and distribution of plant diseases and pathogens and assess the damage caused within a crop production region. These programs have traditionally used observed or predicted disease and pathogen data and environmental information to prescribe management practices that minimize crop loss. Monitoring programs are especially important for crops with broad geographic distribution or for diseases that can cause rapid and great economic losses. Successful monitoring programs have been developed for several plant diseases, including downy mildew of cucurbits, Fusarium head blight of wheat, potato late blight, and rusts of cereal crops. A recent example of a successful disease-monitoring program for an economically important crop is the soybean rust (SBR) monitoring effort within North America. SBR, caused by the fungus Phakopsora pachyrhizi, was first identified in the continental United States in November 2004. SBR causes moderate to severe yield losses globally. The fungus produces foliar lesions on soybean (Glycine max) and other legume hosts. P. pachyrhizi diverts nutrients from the host to its own growth and reproduction. The lesions also reduce photosynthetic area. Uredinia rupture the host epidermis and diminish stomatal regulation of transpiration to cause tissue desiccation and premature defoliation. Severe soybean yield losses can occur if plants defoliate during the mid-reproductive growth stages. The rapid response to the threat of SBR in North America resulted in an unprecedented amount of information dissemination and the development of a real-time, publicly available monitoring and prediction system known as the Soybean Rust-Pest Information Platform for Extension and Education (SBR-PIPE). The objectives of this article are (i) to highlight the successful response effort to SBR in North America, and (ii) to introduce researchers to the quantity and type of data generated by SBR-PIPE. Data from this system may now be used to answer questions about the biology, ecology, and epidemiology of an important pathogen and disease of soybean.
- Published
- 2014
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45. Triazole Sensitivity in a Contemporary Population of Fusarium graminearum from New York Wheat and Competitiveness of a Tebuconazole-Resistant Isolate
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Gary C. Bergstrom, Yanhong Dong, Emerson M. Del Ponte, Jaime A. Cummings, and Piérri Spolti
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Fusarium ,education.field_of_study ,Veterinary medicine ,Inoculation ,Population ,Trichothecene ,food and beverages ,Plant Science ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Fungicide ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Genotype ,Botany ,education ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Mycelium ,Tebuconazole - Abstract
A sample of 50 isolates, including 25 each of the 3-acetyldeoxynivalenol and the 15-acetyldeoxynivalenol trichothecene genotype, from a contemporary collection of Fusarium graminearum associated with Fusarium head blight (FHB) of wheat in New York varied in sensitivity to tebuconazole (effective concentration leading to a 50% reduction of mycelial growth [EC50] of 0.28 to 8.09 mg/liter; μ = 1.12 mg/liter) and metconazole (0.05 to 0.86 mg/liter; μ = 0.33). Mean sensitivity did not differ between the trichothecene genotype groups. Isolate Gz448NY11 from Steuben County is the first tebuconazole-resistant field isolate of F. graminearum reported in the Americas and has the lowest sensitivity to tebuconazole (EC50 = 8.09 mg/liter) documented for this species. Suppression of FHB and deoxynivalenol (DON) following application of a commercial rate of tebuconazole was significantly diminished in plants inoculated with the tebuconazole-resistant isolate compared with those inoculated with a tebuconazole-sensitive isolate well documented for its aggressiveness and toxigenicity on wheat. There was no diminution of FHB and DON suppression with either isolate following application of metconazole. Significantly more individuals of the tebuconazole-resistant isolate were recovered from spikes inoculated with an equal mixture of the two isolates and sprayed with tebuconazole. Future studies are needed on the epidemiology and monitoring of triazole-resistant isolates to understand the risk that fungicide resistance poses to disease management and food security.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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46. Climate change impacts the spread potential of wheat stem rust, a significant crop disease
- Author
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Maricelis Acevedo, Gary C. Bergstrom, Natalie M. Mahowald, Shawn C. Kenaley, and Marje Prank
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Food security ,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment ,Range (biology) ,fungi ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,food and beverages ,Climate change ,Biology ,Stem rust ,biology.organism_classification ,Crop ,Agronomy ,Cultivar ,Overwintering ,General Environmental Science ,Urediniospore - Abstract
Long range atmospheric transport is an important pathway for the spread of plant pathogens, such as rust fungi which can devastate cereal crop health and food security worldwide. In recent years, serious concern has been caused by the evolution of new virulent races of Puccinia graminis f. sp. tritici, a pathogen causing wheat stem rust that can result in close to 100% yield losses on susceptible wheat cultivars in favourable weather conditions. We applied an Earth system model to compare the suitability of the current climate and a business-as-usual climate scenario (RCP 8.5) for 2100 for wheat stem rust. Although there are large uncertainties in modelling changes in disease spread, we focus in this paper on the changes which are likely to be robust to model assumptions. We show that the warmer climate with lower relative humidity and enhanced turbulence will lead to ∼40% increase in the urediniospore emitting potential of an infected field as global average. The main predicted changes in the atmospheric long-range transport include reduced connections between Europe, Africa and South Asia, and increased frequency of spores crossing the mid-latitude oceans. Due to reduction in subfreezing conditions, the overwintering areas of the fungus will expand. On the other hand, projected drier conditions will reduce substantially the probability of an infection starting from deposited spores, except in irrigated fields.
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- 2019
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47. First Report of the Head Smut Fungus Tilletia maclaganii Infecting Switchgrass (Panicum virgatum) in Indiana
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Elena Karlsen-Ayala, K. Johnson, T. Creswell, G. Ruhl, Shawn C. Kenaley, B. Stefancik, and Gary C. Bergstrom
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biology ,Botany ,Panicum virgatum ,Smut fungus ,Plant Science ,biology.organism_classification ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Tilletia maclaganii ,Head (geology) - Published
- 2019
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48. First Report of the Head Smut Fungus Tilletia maclaganii Affecting Switchgrass in Texas
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Shawn C. Kenaley, David B. Lowry, Gary C. Bergstrom, Thomas E. Juenger, Z. K. Montes Ortiz, Jason Bonnette, and A. Van Wallendael
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Agronomy ,Head (linguistics) ,Smut fungus ,Plant Science ,Biology ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Tilletia maclaganii - Published
- 2019
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49. Iturin Levels on Wheat Spikes Linked to Biological Control of Fusarium Head Blight by Bacillus amyloliquefaciens
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R. H. Vaughan, Gary C. Bergstrom, Julia M. Crane, and Donna M. Gibson
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Fusarium ,Antifungal Agents ,Time Factors ,Bacillus amyloliquefaciens ,Population Dynamics ,Biological pest control ,Bacillus ,Plant Science ,Peptides, Cyclic ,Head blight ,Antibiosis ,Botany ,Inflorescence ,Triticum ,Plant Diseases ,Spores, Bacterial ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,biology ,food and beverages ,biology.organism_classification ,Spore ,Horticulture ,Biological Control Agents ,Edible Grain ,Agronomy and Crop Science - Abstract
The TrigoCor strain of Bacillus amyloliquefaciens provides consistent control against Fusarium head blight of wheat in controlled settings but there is a lack of disease and deoxynivalenol suppression in field settings. Since production of antifungal compounds is thought to be the main mode of action of TrigoCor control, we quantified levels of a key family of antifungal metabolites, iturins, as well as monitored Bacillus populations on wheat spikes over 14 days post-application in both the greenhouse and the field. We found that initial iturin levels on spikes in the greenhouse were three times greater than on spikes in the field, but that by 3 days post-application, iturin levels were equivalent and very low in both settings. We also determined that iturins declined rapidly over a 3-day post-application period on wheat spikes in both environments, despite the presence of significant Bacillus populations. Greenhouse trials and antibiosis tests indicated that the lower iturin levels on wheat spikes in the field could be a major factor limiting disease control in field settings. Future efforts to improve Bacillus disease control on wheat spikes and in the phyllosphere of various plants should focus on maintaining higher levels of iturins over critical infection periods.
- Published
- 2013
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50. Genomic and pedigree-based prediction for leaf, stem, and stripe rust resistance in wheat
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Philomin, Juliana, Ravi P, Singh, Pawan K, Singh, Jose, Crossa, Julio, Huerta-Espino, Caixia, Lan, Sridhar, Bhavani, Jessica E, Rutkoski, Jesse A, Poland, Gary C, Bergstrom, and Mark E, Sorrells
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Genetic Markers ,Phenotype ,Genotype ,Models, Genetic ,Basidiomycota ,Quantitative Trait Loci ,Linear Models ,food and beverages ,Original Article ,Genomics ,Triticum ,Disease Resistance ,Plant Diseases - Abstract
Key message Genomic prediction for seedling and adult plant resistance to wheat rusts was compared to prediction using few markers as fixed effects in a least-squares approach and pedigree-based prediction. Abstract The unceasing plant-pathogen arms race and ephemeral nature of some rust resistance genes have been challenging for wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) breeding programs and farmers. Hence, it is important to devise strategies for effective evaluation and exploitation of quantitative rust resistance. One promising approach that could accelerate gain from selection for rust resistance is ‘genomic selection’ which utilizes dense genome-wide markers to estimate the breeding values (BVs) for quantitative traits. Our objective was to compare three genomic prediction models including genomic best linear unbiased prediction (GBLUP), GBLUP A that was GBLUP with selected loci as fixed effects and reproducing kernel Hilbert spaces-markers (RKHS-M) with least-squares (LS) approach, RKHS-pedigree (RKHS-P), and RKHS markers and pedigree (RKHS-MP) to determine the BVs for seedling and/or adult plant resistance (APR) to leaf rust (LR), stem rust (SR), and stripe rust (YR). The 333 lines in the 45th IBWSN and the 313 lines in the 46th IBWSN were genotyped using genotyping-by-sequencing and phenotyped in replicated trials. The mean prediction accuracies ranged from 0.31–0.74 for LR seedling, 0.12–0.56 for LR APR, 0.31–0.65 for SR APR, 0.70–0.78 for YR seedling, and 0.34–0.71 for YR APR. For most datasets, the RKHS-MP model gave the highest accuracies, while LS gave the lowest. GBLUP, GBLUP A, RKHS-M, and RKHS-P models gave similar accuracies. Using genome-wide marker-based models resulted in an average of 42% increase in accuracy over LS. We conclude that GS is a promising approach for improvement of quantitative rust resistance and can be implemented in the breeding pipeline. Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (doi:10.1007/s00122-017-2897-1) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
- Published
- 2016
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