Author:
Wang B.,Dale M. L.,Kochman J. K.
Abstract
Summary. Fusarium wilt, caused by
Fusarium oxysporum f. sp.
vasinfectum, is a new and important disease of cotton in
Australia. Some factors affecting either the infection process or the
subsequent development of symptoms under glasshouse conditions were examined
in this study. The pathogenicity of inocula was significantly affected by the
media in which they were produced. The most severe symptoms developed in the
plants inoculated with the inoculum produced in Komada-Ezuka liquid medium, in
which glucose and L-asparagine were used as the carbon and nitrogen source,
respectively. Symptoms were significantly more severe in plants inoculated
with the inocula suspended in culture filtrates than in those inoculated with
the inocula suspended in distilled water, indicating that fungal metabolites
played an important role in the infection process. The disease was enhanced by
high conidial concentration (>1.0 x 106
conidia/mL), slightly acidic inoculum (pH 4.0–5.5) and longer
inoculation period (5–25 min). One-week-old seedlings were most
susceptible, regardless of cultivar, and the resistance of plants increased
with their age. The development of symptoms was enhanced at a moderate
temperature range (18–23°C), but suppressed at a higher temperature
range (28–33°C). Based on these results, an optimised procedure of
pathogenicity assay is described.
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences