FACTORS INFLUENCING INFECTION OF ONION LEAVES BY ALTERNARIA-PORRI ANDSUBSEQUENT LESION EXPANSION

Authors
Citation
Kl. Everts et Ml. Lacy, FACTORS INFLUENCING INFECTION OF ONION LEAVES BY ALTERNARIA-PORRI ANDSUBSEQUENT LESION EXPANSION, Plant disease, 80(3), 1996, pp. 276-280
Citations number
21
Categorie Soggetti
Plant Sciences
Journal title
ISSN journal
01912917
Volume
80
Issue
3
Year of publication
1996
Pages
276 - 280
Database
ISI
SICI code
0191-2917(1996)80:3<276:FIIOOL>2.0.ZU;2-1
Abstract
Alternaria porri conidia deposited on onion leaves formed one to sever al germination tubes and appressoria and often penetrated at more than one locus under conditions favorable for infection. After 3 h in the dew chamber at 24 degrees C following inoculation of onion leaves, 73% of conidia had germinated and 5% had formed appressoria. Infection hy phae were not observed until 6 h following inoculation, at which time 2% of conidia had formed infection hyphae and 0.5% of conidia had caus ed visible lesions. Length of dew period was significantly positively correlated with lesion numbers (r = 0.784) but not with lesion size. T here were two types of lesions: expanding and nonexpanding (flecks of less than or equal to 2 mm in diameter). Expanding lesions resulted ev en when plants inoculated with dry conidia of A. porri were incubated in a growth chamber under conditions not conducive to infection for 4 days prior to being placed in a dew chamber for 24 h under conditions conducive to infection, indicating that conidia survived well under th ese conditions. Flecks formed concurrently with expanding lesions. Ger minated conidia were inevitably found near the centers of flecks, but, for unknown reasons, these flecks did not continue to expand.