Back to Search Start Over

Synchronicity of pollination and inoculation with Claviceps africana and its effects on pollen–pistil compatibility and seed production in sorghum

Authors :
Ma. Eugenia Cisneros-López
Miguel Hernández-Martínez
Víctor A. González-Hernández
H. Araceli Zavaleta-Mancera
Gustavo Mora-Aguilera
Leopoldo E. Mendoza-Onofre
Leobigildo Córdova-Téllez
Source :
Fungal Biology. 114:285-292
Publication Year :
2010
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2010.

Abstract

Sorghum ergot (caused by Claviceps africana) is a disease that affects sorghum seed development and yield. The interaction between pollen tube growth and hyphal development determines whether ovaries will be fertilized or colonized. Thus their respective deposition times on the stigma are critical. The effect of the time interval between pollination and inoculation on stigma receptivity and seed production was measured under field conditions in the male-sterile line A9 at Montecillo, State of México (2240m altitude). Pollination and inoculation treatments, from simultaneous application to 2 and 4h difference, were imposed when all stigmas on the panicle had emerged. Control panicles were either only pollinated or only inoculated. Eighteen hours later, pollen grains that adhered to, and germinated within the stigma, pollen tubes in the style and ovary, and fertilized pistils were counted. Pistils showing some disease expression (germinated spores, mycelium growth, or tissue necrosis) at 18, 48, and 72h were recorded. The number of diseased florets was registered at the dough growth stage, while number of seeds, grain yield and 100-seeds weight was measured at the physiological maturity. The pathogen applied in a water suspension of macro and secondary conidia caused a decrease in stigma receptivity; the greatest decrease (40-60%) occurred when the pollen and the inoculum were deposited almost simultaneously, regardless of which was deposited first. The route of the pollen tube was also the route for fungal infection. On average, treatments first inoculated had 60% more diseased florets and 36% less grain yield, 30% fewer seeds and seed size decreased 8%, than those first pollinated.

Details

ISSN :
18786146
Volume :
114
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Fungal Biology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....22e00e9bfed2d4dbca9bf270aa477be0
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.funbio.2010.02.007