Inoculum threshold for stripe rust infection in wheat

Citation

Araujo, G.T., Gaudet, D.A., Amundsen, E., Frick, M., Aboukhaddour, R., Selinger, B.L., Laroche, A. (2023). Inoculum threshold for stripe rust infection in wheat. Canadian Journal of Plant Pathology, [online] 45(3), 304-319. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/07060661.2023.2177888

Plain language summary

Stripe rust and powdery mildew are important diseases of wheat in Canada and worldwide. Molecular detection methods permit spore detection of few spores; therefore, there is a need to determine initial inoculum thresholds for pathogens to cause disease under both controlled environments and in the field. Susceptible wheat cultivars ‘Avocet’ and ‘AC Barrie’ were inoculated with different quantities of spores (0, 1E+3, 1E+4, 1E+5, 1E+6, and 1E+7) of Pst and Bgt. Disease incidence, severity and infection type were evaluated. Results of controlled environment studies showed that the minimum number of spores necessary to cause appreciable incidence and severity for Pst was at higher spore concentrations of 105-106 spores. Conversely, low incidence and severity levels were observed at 1E+3-1E+4 spores for Bgt. Collectively, these results demonstrated that stripe rust severities increased with increasing spore concentration only at high spore levels. In contrast, Bgt severity increased with spore concentration from 1E+3 to 1E+7 spores mL-1. Understanding of minimum spore numbers required for field disease development will be a prerequisite for predicting epidemics and devising fungicide control measures for future sustainable agricultural systems.

Abstract

Stripe rust (Puccinia striiformis f. sp. tritici (Pst)) and powdery mildew (Blumeria graminis f. sp. tritici (Bgt)) are important diseases of wheat in Canada and worldwide. Molecular detection methods permit spore detection of few spores; therefore, there is a need to determine initial inoculum thresholds for pathogens to cause disease under both controlled environments and in the field. Susceptible wheat cultivars ‘Avocet’ and ‘AC Barrie’ were inoculated with different quantities of spores (0, 103, 104, 105, 106, and 107) of Pst and Bgt. Disease incidence, severity and infection type were evaluated. Results of controlled environment studies showed that the minimum number of spores necessary to cause appreciable incidence and severity for Pst was at higher spore concentrations of 105–106 spores. Conversely, low incidence and severity levels were observed at 103–104 spores for Bgt. Despite occurrence of natural Pst infection, results of field studies in 2016 and 2017 in Southern Alberta demonstrated that significant increases in severity levels were observed following application of 1.2 × 107 spores. Collectively, these results demonstrated that stripe rust severities increased with increasing spore concentration only at high spore levels. In contrast, Bgt severity increased with spore concentration from 103 to 107 spores mL−1. In vitro and in vivo spore germination tests demonstrated germination rates of Pst spores were reduced at lower spore concentrations compared to germination rates at the higher concentrations. Understanding of minimum spore numbers required for disease development will be a prerequisite for predicting epidemics and devising fungicide control measures for future sustainable agricultural systems.

Publication date

2023-01-01