S. Qostal, S. Kribel, M. Chliyeh, N. Mouden, MA El Alaoui, S. Serghat, A. Ouazzani Touhami, A. Douira
{"title":"First report of Fusarium redolens causing root rot disease of wheat and barley in Morocco","authors":"S. Qostal, S. Kribel, M. Chliyeh, N. Mouden, MA El Alaoui, S. Serghat, A. Ouazzani Touhami, A. Douira","doi":"10.5943/cream/11/1/19","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Field surveys carried out in wheat (durum and soft) and barley fields in April-May 2017 in North-West Morocco resulted in the isolation of a large number of fungal isolates from typical necrotic lesions characterizing the root rot of these cereals. Microscopic observations, based on morphological criteria linked an isolate of Fusarium oxysporum with an isolate of F. solani . Another Fusarium isolate ZF25, showed intermediate morphological characteristics between F. solani and F. oxysporum. Molecular comparisons showed the ZF25 and F. redolens to have a similarity of 99%. The sequence from this isolate was submitted to GenBank (accession number MT758201). Koch’s postulate was verified by inoculating these three isolates into varieties of wheat (hard and soft) and barley. All isolates induced necrotic lesions on the roots. Pathogen re-isolations from these lesions were positive. The percentages of the highest severity class S4 can reach 41.6% for wheat and 16.6% for barley. The percentages of incidences and indices of root rot observed in the wheat and barley plants inoculated with the three Fusarium isolates vary between 83.6 and 100% and between 58.3 and 70% respectively. These inoculation tests have shown that F. redolens has a strong pathogenicity towards wheat and barley. This species has not been reported in Morocco among the fungi associated with roots of barley and wheat and to our knowledge; this is the first report of this pathogen among the Fusarium complex responsible for root rot of these cereals.","PeriodicalId":37611,"journal":{"name":"Current Research in Environmental and Applied Mycology","volume":"52 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2021-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Current Research in Environmental and Applied Mycology","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.5943/cream/11/1/19","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"Environmental Science","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Field surveys carried out in wheat (durum and soft) and barley fields in April-May 2017 in North-West Morocco resulted in the isolation of a large number of fungal isolates from typical necrotic lesions characterizing the root rot of these cereals. Microscopic observations, based on morphological criteria linked an isolate of Fusarium oxysporum with an isolate of F. solani . Another Fusarium isolate ZF25, showed intermediate morphological characteristics between F. solani and F. oxysporum. Molecular comparisons showed the ZF25 and F. redolens to have a similarity of 99%. The sequence from this isolate was submitted to GenBank (accession number MT758201). Koch’s postulate was verified by inoculating these three isolates into varieties of wheat (hard and soft) and barley. All isolates induced necrotic lesions on the roots. Pathogen re-isolations from these lesions were positive. The percentages of the highest severity class S4 can reach 41.6% for wheat and 16.6% for barley. The percentages of incidences and indices of root rot observed in the wheat and barley plants inoculated with the three Fusarium isolates vary between 83.6 and 100% and between 58.3 and 70% respectively. These inoculation tests have shown that F. redolens has a strong pathogenicity towards wheat and barley. This species has not been reported in Morocco among the fungi associated with roots of barley and wheat and to our knowledge; this is the first report of this pathogen among the Fusarium complex responsible for root rot of these cereals.
期刊介绍:
Current Research in Environmental & Applied Mycology (Journal of Fungal Biology) is an international peer-reviewed journal with swift publication. This includes reviews of research advances and methodology and articles in applied and environmental mycology. Current Research in Environmental & Applied Mycology has no page charges or open access charges and offers a free outlet for the publications of the mycology community. All manuscripts will undergo peer review before acceptance. Copyright is retained by the authors.