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Colonization of winter wheat grain with Fusarium and Alternaria species and influence on pest control management

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2019
Authors
Jevtić, Radivoje
Župunski, Vesna
Lalošević, Mirjana
Tančić-Živanov, Sonja
Article (Published version)
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Abstract
The interactions among grain-colonizing species on wheat and their effects on incidence and severity of Fusarium head blight are usually neglected in studies. Although saprophytes can predominate over pathogenic species, studies related to the control of saprophytic mycoflora in wheat production are rare. Here we hypothesized that the infection level of Fusarium and contamination level of Alternaria spp. are significantly influenced by environmental factors and their interactions and investigated the relationship between Fusarium and Alternaria spp. under field conditions and estimate its effect on conventional wheat production, The most prevalent species associated with wheat grain were Alternaria spp. (80% in 2012 and 55% in 2013), and the second was F. graminearum (9% in 2012 and 38% in 2013). In general, varieties that are moderately resistant to Fusarium infection are less contaminated with Alternaria spp. compared to susceptible and moderately susceptible varieties. F. graminearu...m on Alternaria spp. had a strong antagonistic effect on moderately susceptible and susceptible varieties with P lt 0.001 using Spearman's coefficient of correlation. An infection level of F. graminearum over 25% showed antagonistic activity against Alternaria spp. under field conditions. Using prothioconazole+tebuconazole as a chemical measure to prevent F. graminearum infection on susceptible varieties can be related to an increase in the contamination level of Alternaria spp., jeopardizing the effectiveness of seed health control measures.

Keywords:
Wheat / Fusarium / Alternaria / Interaction / Prothioconazole plus tebuconazole
Source:
Journal of General Plant Pathology, 2019, 85, 4, 273-281
Publisher:
  • Springer Japan Kk, Tokyo
Funding / projects:
  • Modern breeding of small grains for present and future needs (RS-31066)
  • Ministry of Education, Science and Technological Development of the Republic of Serbia

DOI: 10.1007/s10327-019-00844-y

ISSN: 1345-2630

WoS: 000472576600004

Scopus: 2-s2.0-85061709344
[ Google Scholar ]
2
2
URI
http://fiver.ifvcns.rs/handle/123456789/1845
Collections
  • Radovi istraživača / Researchers' papers
Institution/Community
FiVeR
TY  - JOUR
AU  - Jevtić, Radivoje
AU  - Župunski, Vesna
AU  - Lalošević, Mirjana
AU  - Tančić-Živanov, Sonja
PY  - 2019
UR  - http://fiver.ifvcns.rs/handle/123456789/1845
AB  - The interactions among grain-colonizing species on wheat and their effects on incidence and severity of Fusarium head blight are usually neglected in studies. Although saprophytes can predominate over pathogenic species, studies related to the control of saprophytic mycoflora in wheat production are rare. Here we hypothesized that the infection level of Fusarium and contamination level of Alternaria spp. are significantly influenced by environmental factors and their interactions and investigated the relationship between Fusarium and Alternaria spp. under field conditions and estimate its effect on conventional wheat production, The most prevalent species associated with wheat grain were Alternaria spp. (80% in 2012 and 55% in 2013), and the second was F. graminearum (9% in 2012 and 38% in 2013). In general, varieties that are moderately resistant to Fusarium infection are less contaminated with Alternaria spp. compared to susceptible and moderately susceptible varieties. F. graminearum on Alternaria spp. had a strong antagonistic effect on moderately susceptible and susceptible varieties with P lt 0.001 using Spearman's coefficient of correlation. An infection level of F. graminearum over 25% showed antagonistic activity against Alternaria spp. under field conditions. Using prothioconazole+tebuconazole as a chemical measure to prevent F. graminearum infection on susceptible varieties can be related to an increase in the contamination level of Alternaria spp., jeopardizing the effectiveness of seed health control measures.
PB  - Springer Japan Kk, Tokyo
T2  - Journal of General Plant Pathology
T1  - Colonization of winter wheat grain with Fusarium and Alternaria species and influence on pest control management
EP  - 281
IS  - 4
SP  - 273
VL  - 85
DO  - 10.1007/s10327-019-00844-y
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Jevtić, Radivoje and Župunski, Vesna and Lalošević, Mirjana and Tančić-Živanov, Sonja",
year = "2019",
abstract = "The interactions among grain-colonizing species on wheat and their effects on incidence and severity of Fusarium head blight are usually neglected in studies. Although saprophytes can predominate over pathogenic species, studies related to the control of saprophytic mycoflora in wheat production are rare. Here we hypothesized that the infection level of Fusarium and contamination level of Alternaria spp. are significantly influenced by environmental factors and their interactions and investigated the relationship between Fusarium and Alternaria spp. under field conditions and estimate its effect on conventional wheat production, The most prevalent species associated with wheat grain were Alternaria spp. (80% in 2012 and 55% in 2013), and the second was F. graminearum (9% in 2012 and 38% in 2013). In general, varieties that are moderately resistant to Fusarium infection are less contaminated with Alternaria spp. compared to susceptible and moderately susceptible varieties. F. graminearum on Alternaria spp. had a strong antagonistic effect on moderately susceptible and susceptible varieties with P lt 0.001 using Spearman's coefficient of correlation. An infection level of F. graminearum over 25% showed antagonistic activity against Alternaria spp. under field conditions. Using prothioconazole+tebuconazole as a chemical measure to prevent F. graminearum infection on susceptible varieties can be related to an increase in the contamination level of Alternaria spp., jeopardizing the effectiveness of seed health control measures.",
publisher = "Springer Japan Kk, Tokyo",
journal = "Journal of General Plant Pathology",
title = "Colonization of winter wheat grain with Fusarium and Alternaria species and influence on pest control management",
pages = "281-273",
number = "4",
volume = "85",
doi = "10.1007/s10327-019-00844-y"
}
Jevtić, R., Župunski, V., Lalošević, M.,& Tančić-Živanov, S.. (2019). Colonization of winter wheat grain with Fusarium and Alternaria species and influence on pest control management. in Journal of General Plant Pathology
Springer Japan Kk, Tokyo., 85(4), 273-281.
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10327-019-00844-y
Jevtić R, Župunski V, Lalošević M, Tančić-Živanov S. Colonization of winter wheat grain with Fusarium and Alternaria species and influence on pest control management. in Journal of General Plant Pathology. 2019;85(4):273-281.
doi:10.1007/s10327-019-00844-y .
Jevtić, Radivoje, Župunski, Vesna, Lalošević, Mirjana, Tančić-Živanov, Sonja, "Colonization of winter wheat grain with Fusarium and Alternaria species and influence on pest control management" in Journal of General Plant Pathology, 85, no. 4 (2019):273-281,
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10327-019-00844-y . .

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