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אסיף מאגר המחקר החקלאי
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Verticillium wilt of paprika caused by a highly virulent isolate of Verticillium dahliae
Year:
1998
Source of publication :
Plant Disease
Authors :
Amitai, Sarit
;
.
Erlich, Orly
;
.
Hazanovsky, Marina
;
.
Tsror, Leah
;
.
Volume :
82
Co-Authors:
Facilitators :
From page:
437
To page:
439
(
Total pages:
3
)
Abstract:
Verticillium dahliae caused wilting, stunting and early dying of paprika plants in Israel, resulting in a 22% reduction in yield. A V. dahliae isolate from diseased paprika plants was slower growing on agar medium than V. dahliae isolates from potato, tomato, watermelon, and Dodonaea, but formed microsclerotia earlier. The paprika isolate of V. dahliae was highly virulent to paprika in pathogenicity tests. Disease severity indices obtained from three paprika cultivars ranged from 3.7 to 4.9 (on a scale of 0 to 5). The disease caused height reductions of 43 to 62% in the three inoculated paprika cultivars, and pathogen colonization levels were 10- to 35-fold higher in stems than in leaves. The potato isolate of V. dahliae did not produce symptoms or cause stunting of paprika, and could not be detected in stems or leaves. The tomato, watermelon, and Dodonaea isolates did not cause disease symptoms in paprika, although they colonized the plant tissue. In potato and eggplant, the paprika isolate caused a higher incidence of disease with more severe symptoms and a higher level of tissue colonization than did the potato isolate.
Note:
Related Files :
Dodonaea
eggplant
pathogenicity
potato
Verticillium
Verticillium dahliae
yield reduction
Show More
Related Content
More details
DOI :
Article number:
0
Affiliations:
Database:
Scopus
Publication Type:
article
;
.
Language:
English
Editors' remarks:
ID:
18511
Last updated date:
02/03/2022 17:27
Creation date:
16/04/2018 23:22
Scientific Publication
Verticillium wilt of paprika caused by a highly virulent isolate of Verticillium dahliae
82
Verticillium wilt of paprika caused by a highly virulent isolate of Verticillium dahliae
Verticillium dahliae caused wilting, stunting and early dying of paprika plants in Israel, resulting in a 22% reduction in yield. A V. dahliae isolate from diseased paprika plants was slower growing on agar medium than V. dahliae isolates from potato, tomato, watermelon, and Dodonaea, but formed microsclerotia earlier. The paprika isolate of V. dahliae was highly virulent to paprika in pathogenicity tests. Disease severity indices obtained from three paprika cultivars ranged from 3.7 to 4.9 (on a scale of 0 to 5). The disease caused height reductions of 43 to 62% in the three inoculated paprika cultivars, and pathogen colonization levels were 10- to 35-fold higher in stems than in leaves. The potato isolate of V. dahliae did not produce symptoms or cause stunting of paprika, and could not be detected in stems or leaves. The tomato, watermelon, and Dodonaea isolates did not cause disease symptoms in paprika, although they colonized the plant tissue. In potato and eggplant, the paprika isolate caused a higher incidence of disease with more severe symptoms and a higher level of tissue colonization than did the potato isolate.
Scientific Publication
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