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Resistance of New Zealand Provenance Leptospermum scoparium, Kunzea robusta, Kunzea linearis, and Metrosideros excelsa to Austropuccinia psidii

Authors :
David J. Lee
Angus J. Carnegie
Tracey Menzies
Alby Marsh
Grant R. Smith
Emily Koot
Geoff S. Pegg
Gary J. Houliston
Louise S. Shuey
David Chagné
Ranjith Pathirana
Julie Ryan
Beccy Ganley
Julia Soewarto
Jayanthi Nadarajan
Roanne Sutherland
Elise A. Arnst
Source :
Plant Disease. 104:1771-1780
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Scientific Societies, 2020.

Abstract

Resistance to the pandemic strain of Austropuccinia psidii was identified in New Zealand provenance Leptospermum scoparium, Kunzea robusta, and K. linearis plants. Only 1 Metrosideros excelsa-resistant plant was found (of the 570 tested) and no resistant plants of either Lophomyrtus bullata or L. obcordata were found. Three types of resistance were identified in Leptospermum scoparium. The first two, a putative immune response and a hypersensitive response, are leaf resistance mechanisms found in other myrtaceous species while on the lateral and main stems a putative immune stem resistance was also observed. Both leaf and stem infection were found on K. robusta and K. linearis plants as well as branch tip dieback that developed on almost 50% of the plants. L. scoparium, K. robusta, and K. linearis are the first myrtaceous species where consistent infection of stems has been observed in artificial inoculation trials. This new finding and the first observation of significant branch tip dieback of plants of the two Kunzea spp. resulted in the development of two new myrtle rust disease severity assessment scales. Significant seed family and provenance effects were found in L. scoparium, K. robusta, and K. linearis: some families produced significantly more plants with leaf, stem, and (in Kunzea spp.) branch tip dieback resistance, and provenances provided different percentages of resistant families and plants. The distribution of the disease symptoms on plants from the same seed family, and between plants from different seed families, suggested that the leaf, stem, and branch tip dieback resistances were the result of independent disease resistance mechanisms.

Details

ISSN :
19437692 and 01912917
Volume :
104
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Plant Disease
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........dfc2ee8327e45a3c80b31975a491e6dc
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1094/pdis-11-19-2302-re