LIVESTOCK DEATHS ASSOCIATED WITH CLAVIBACTER-TOXICUS ANGUINA SP INFECTION IN SEEDHEADS OF AGROSTIS-AVENACEA AND POLYPOGON-MONSPELIENSIS

Citation
Ac. Mckay et al., LIVESTOCK DEATHS ASSOCIATED WITH CLAVIBACTER-TOXICUS ANGUINA SP INFECTION IN SEEDHEADS OF AGROSTIS-AVENACEA AND POLYPOGON-MONSPELIENSIS, Plant disease, 77(6), 1993, pp. 635-641
Citations number
31
Categorie Soggetti
Plant Sciences
Journal title
ISSN journal
01912917
Volume
77
Issue
6
Year of publication
1993
Pages
635 - 641
Database
ISI
SICI code
0191-2917(1993)77:6<635:LDAWCA>2.0.ZU;2-D
Abstract
Flood plain staggers, a recently discovered poisoning of livestock, ha s been linked to Clavibacter toxicus infection in the seedheads of blo wn grass, Agrostis avenacea, in northern New South Wales and annual be ardgrass, Polypogon monspeliensis, in the southeast of South Australia . The same bacterium on annual ryegrass, Lolium rigidum, causes the po isoning of livestock known as annual ryegrass toxicity. Strains of C t oxicus from A. avenacea and P. monspeliensis were indistinguishable fr om strains from L. rigidum based on colony morphology, serological rea ctions, and bacteriophage specificity. Bacteriophages isolated from C. toxicus on the three hosts were indistinguishable from each other bas ed on DNA restriction patterns. In allozyme studies, considerable vari ation was observed between the C toxicus strains from the three hosts, but the variation was within the range exhibited by a single species. C. toxicus is carried into L. rigidum by a seed gall-forming nematode , Anguina funesta. Anguina nematodes are also associated with C. toxic us infection of A. avenacea and P. monspeliensis. Allozyme studies ind icate that the same Anguina species probably infects both grasses, and that it is not Anguina funesta, Anguina agrostis, Anguina tritici, or the species found on velvetgrass (Holcus lanatus). This is the first recording of a nematode other than Anguina funesta as a vector for C. toxicus. The new vector broadens the range of grasses that the bacteri um can infect.