Back to Search Start Over

Development of cercospora blight epidemics and effect on the summer annual Heliotropium europaeum in the field

Authors :
L. A. Brun
S. Hasan
M. Jourdan
Andy Sheppard
E. Delmotte
Source :
Annals of Applied Biology. 127:137-150
Publication Year :
1995
Publisher :
Wiley, 1995.

Abstract

Summary Heliotropium europaeum, common heliotrope, is a serious economic weed in southern Australia. Cercospora blight occurs on H. europaeum in both its native (Mediterranean) and non-native (Australian) range. The causal agents are genetically different forms of an asexual pathogen in the form-genus Cercospora in each region. Natural epidemics of cercospora blight killed weed infestations in both Australia and France. The epidemiology of the disease did not differ between the two regions once differences in rainfall had been considered. Rainfall was important for disease spread. In France, field inoculation experiments were conducted using different concentrations of conidia prepared from a monospore isolate. Cercospora blight reduced seed production 89%, but did not reduce viability. Increased inoculum concentration and inoculation of younger plants encouraged an early epidemic, but did not affect the rate of disease development once the epidemic took hold. In order to be effective at controlling this weed in Australia, these pathogens need to attack young hosts and have regular rain-splash to facilitate spread to new growth.

Details

ISSN :
17447348 and 00034746
Volume :
127
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Annals of Applied Biology
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........d80eea55f78308d67cd19d1700f827c3
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1744-7348.1995.tb06658.x