Abam. Baudoin et Wl. Bruckart, POPULATION-DYNAMICS AND SPREAD OF PUCCINIA-CARDUORUM IN THE EASTERN UNITED-STATES, Plant disease, 80(10), 1996, pp. 1193-1196
Puccinia carduorum was first introduced into western Virginia in 1987
for biological control of musk thistle (Carduus thoermeri). The pathog
en's distribution was surveyed in 1992; it had spread to South Carolin
a, Georgia, Tennessee, Kentucky, Ohio, southeast Indiana, Maryland, an
d Delaware, some points more than 500 km from the release site. In 199
4, it was found west of the Mississippi River in north central Missour
i. Population development of the rust was monitored in several natural
musk thistle stands in 1991 and 1992. Average pustule numbers per lea
f were 0 to 0.7 in early May during early stem elongation, 0 to 17 (19
91) and 8 to 52 (1992) at seed ripening in late June and early July as
old plants died, 0.2 to 2.5 on young rosettes in September and Octobe
r, and declining to near 0 by early December. Germinability of uredini
ospores from green tissue ranged from 10 to 88% (mean 51%) from May to
October, with no significant seasonal trend. Teliospores were present
on dead plants in late July and August but did not become prevalent o
n young rosettes until October and November. Latent periods (days from
inoculation to first open pustule) on plants in the field were 13 to
14 days for inoculations in late April and early May, 8 days in June,
17 days in early October, and about 25 days in late October.