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ARS Home » Southeast Area » Poplarville, Mississippi » Southern Horticultural Research Unit » Research » Publications at this Location » Publication #183266

Title: Development of Erysiphe Pulchram, the Causal Agent of Powdery Mildew, on Leaf Disks of Susceptible and Resistant Flowering Dogwood (Cornus Florida)

Author
item LI, YONGHAO - UNIV OF TENN
item WINDHAM, MARK - UNIV OF TENN
item TRIGIANO, ROBERT - UNIV OF TENN
item Fare, Donna
item Spiers, James
item Copes, Warren

Submitted to: Canadian Journal of Plant Pathology
Publication Type: Peer Reviewed Journal
Publication Acceptance Date: 9/28/2005
Publication Date: 1/10/2006
Citation: Li, Y.H., Windham, M.T., Trigiano, R.N., Fare, D.C., Spiers, J.M., Copes, W.E. 2006. Component on Resistant to Powdery Mildew Caused by Erysiphe pulchra on Flowering Dogwood. Canadian Journal of Plant Pathology. 28:71-76.

Interpretive Summary: This is the first report that evaluates disease resistance of flowering dogwood lines to powdery mildew using detached leaf disks in a laboratory. This technique documented partial plant resistance components that reduced four developmental stages of the fungal pathogen: incomplete structure development on the leaf surface, poor success infecting the outer cells of a leaf, slowed development within the leaf tissue, and reduced production of wind-borne infection propagules on the leaf surface. This simple screening technique documented two of the four development stages were involved in field resistance exhibited by 'Karen's Appalachian Blush', a dogwood cultivar. This information will help research scientists and extension specialists develop and document disease resistance, which will help producers market disease resistant dogwood cultivars.

Technical Abstract: Differences in resistance to powdery mildew were observed on detached leaf disks of six flowering dogwood lines inoculated with conidia of Erysiphe pulchra. Significant differences (P < 0.02) in germinated conidia with branched hyphae, infection efficiency, latent period and sporulation were detected among dogwood lines. However, percentages of spore germination (P = 0.0745) and secondary appressorium formation (P = 0.2661) were not significantly different among lines. In addition to sporulation, infection efficiency and latent period were major differentiable components between highly susceptible and moderately susceptible lines and between moderately susceptible and resistant lines, respectively. Similar to infection efficiency, percentages of germinated conidia with branched hyphae on highly susceptible lines were significantly greater than on resistant and moderately susceptible lines. A recently released flowering dogwood cultivar, ‘Karen’s Appalachian Blush’, expressed significantly higher levels of resistance to powdery mildew than ‘Cherokee Brave’ in latent period and sporulation. Laboratory assays using detached leaf disks could be useful for screening dogwood selections and cultivars for resistance to powdery mildew.