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Factors affecting development of iris rhizome rot caused by Botrytis convoluta Whetzel and Drayton

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Title Factors affecting development of iris rhizome rot caused by Botrytis convoluta Whetzel and Drayton
Names Maas, J. L. (creator)
Powelson, Robert L. (advisor)
Date Issued 1968-04-19 (iso8601)
Note Graduation date: 1968
Abstract Abundant conidial and sclerotial production occurs on iris
plants infected with Botrytis convoluta Whetzel and Drayton during
the cool moist months of the year. Experiments were designed to
study the survival and inoculum potential of conidia and sclerotia.
Basic nutritional requirements of the fungus in culture were also
studied.
Results of field and laboratory studies indicated a large percentage
of iris plants apparently free of B. convoluta carried latent
infections. The evidence indicates that these latent infections originate
from contact of healthy tissue with senescent or dead leaf and/
or rhizome tissues. Progression into healthy tissues is halted by
increasingly higher soil and air temperatures and periderm formation
which walls off the infections. Active rot development occurs
when conditions favorable for pathogenesis return. These latent infections which are undetectable visually would be a very important
means of dissemination of the disease since growers believe they
are shipping sound rhizomes. Chemical control would be difficult
because the infections are inaccessible to non-systemic fungicides.
Field inoculation of rhizomes with conidia, sclerotia and rolled-oat cultures of B. convoluta resulted in significantly increased infection
of iris plants inoculated with conidia. Sclerotia placed onto
wounded areas of rhizomes also caused significantly increased infection
incidence. Differences in field resistance to the pathogen
were also noted. Iris plants of the variety Cotlet were found generally
more prone to infection and more extensively rotted than Apricot
Glory and Sunset Blaze varieties.
Laboratory results indicated that conidia and sclerotia were
able to cause infection of intact iris rhizome offsets. Conidia applied
to offsets colonized senescent leaves and, using this as a food
base, invaded healthy juvenile leaves in contact with them. Germ
tubes were observed lying parallel to and over longitudinal leaf epidermal
cell wall junctures and in several instances, they appeared
to be between cells. Terminal appressorium-like swellings of germ
tubes were observed on leaf surfaces; however, no direct penetration
of leaf tissue was observed.
Sclerotia remained viable for one year at 5 to 25°C under dry
storage conditions. Survival of conidia stored in situ on colonies for 257 days decreased with increasingly higher temperatures, dropping
to less than five percent at 25°C after 210 days. Survival of sclerotia
or conidia was not markedly affected by storage at -70°C for 90 days,
and conidia remained at least 70 percent viable at -70°C after 257 days.
Sclerotia survived in moist soil for 60 days at temperatures of
15°C or below. No sclerotia were found viable after 60 days when soil
temperatures were above 20°C. Non-viable sclerotia were found to be
colonized by other fungi; mainly species of Trichoderma, Fusarium,
Mucor, and Sepedonium as well as by bacteria.
Nutritional studies in vitro showed B. convoluta to utilize the
carbohydrates maltose, glucose, sucrose, starch, galactose, and
fructose, from good to poor carbon sources respectively. Lactose and
sorbose were poor carbon sources. Nitrogen sources, from good to
poor, were casein hydrolysate, asparagine, ammonium tartrate,
ammonium sulfate, and glutamate. Potassium nitrate, glycine, and
urea were poor nitrogen sources. Growth was most rapid when the
pH of the media was pH 3-4. B. convoluta required light to be stimulated
into sporulation. Sporulation was stimulated by exposure to
white or to near-ultraviolet light. Optimum temperatures for linear
growth was near 23°C and optimum for sclerotium formation was
10-15°C. Germination of conidia incubated in distilled water was
generally very low (less than 10%) and germination was invariably
much higher (85-100%) when an exogenous carbon source was supplied.
Genre Thesis/Dissertation
Topic Iris (Plant) -- Diseases and pests
Identifier http://hdl.handle.net/1957/46981

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