Author:
MacLeod W. J.,Sweetingham M. W.
Abstract
A new root disease of narrow-leafed lupins that is common in the northern
wheatbelt of Western Australia wa found to be caused by a slow-growing
binucleate Rhizoctonia sp. with characteristically
narrow hyphae (2–4 µm). The new root disease causes distinct
patches of poor growth superficially similar to rhizoctonia bare patch. This
root disease of lupins is widespread in the northern lupin-growing areas of
Western Australia.
The biological nature of the disorder was established by transfer of soil from
a patch to a clean area and by treating patches using a soil fumigant (methyl
bromide–chloropicrin).
The thin binucleate Rhizoctonia sp. (TBR) was isolated
directly from soil within, but not outside, patches by using a soil immersion
plate technique. Lupins grown in pots inoculated with the TBR developed
symptoms consistent with those seen on plants in patches in the field, and the
fungus was re-isolated from the diseased roots.
Field soil was inoculated with TBR, and in the following year, lupins were
sown over the inoculated area and developed patches identical to the stunted
patches occurring naturally. The fungus was re-isolated from diseased lupin
roots taken from inoculated patches but not from diseased roots from outside
patches.
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Cited by
10 articles.
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