1. Effects of an innovative strategy to contain grapevine Bois noir: field treatment with resistance inducers.
- Author
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Romanazzi G, Murolo S, and Feliziani E
- Subjects
- Beverages analysis, Biomass, Chitosan pharmacology, Glutathione pharmacology, Italy, Oligosaccharides pharmacology, Organophosphorus Compounds pharmacology, Phytoplasma genetics, Phytoplasma physiology, Plant Diseases microbiology, Plant Leaves drug effects, Plant Leaves growth & development, Plant Leaves immunology, Plant Leaves microbiology, Plant Shoots drug effects, Plant Shoots growth & development, Plant Shoots immunology, Plant Shoots microbiology, Polymerase Chain Reaction, Thiadiazoles pharmacology, Vitis growth & development, Vitis immunology, Vitis microbiology, Disease Resistance drug effects, Phytoplasma isolation & purification, Plant Diseases immunology, Plant Diseases prevention & control, Vitis drug effects
- Abstract
Grapevine Bois noir (BN) is a phytoplasma disease that is widespread in most viticultural regions of the world, and it can result in heavy reductions to yields and grape juice quality. At present, there is no effective strategy to reduce the incidence of BN-infected grapevines. However, phytoplasma-infected plants can recover through spontaneous or induced symptom remission. Five elicitors (chitosan, two glutathione-plus-oligosaccharine formulations, benzothiadiazole, and phosetyl-Al) were applied weekly to the canopy of BN-infected 'Chardonnay' grapevines from early May to late July. The best and most constant recovery inductions were obtained with benzothiadiazole and the two glutathione-plus-oligosaccharine formulations. The plants that recovered naturally or following the elicitors showed qualitative and quantitative parameters of production no different from healthy plants. In another vineyard, diseased plants showed reduced shoot length and production compared with healthy plants, and there were no negative effects on these parameters for grapevines sprayed with a glutathione-plus-oligosaccharine formulation. The application of resistance inducers promoted the recovery of BN-infected grapevines with no adverse effects on the plants. Therefore, grapevine can be used as a model species to test this innovative strategy to contain phytoplasma diseases.
- Published
- 2013
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