Affiliation:
1. Plant Production and Forest Resources Department University of Valladolid Palencia Spain
2. Department of Plant Pathology University of California Davis California USA
Abstract
AbstractScots pine (Pinus sylvestris) and Stone pine (Pinus pinea) are two important species used in re‐forestation that are subject to damage by damping‐off fungi in forest nurseries. Twenty‐two isolates of Fusarium oxysporum and F. verticillioides from diseased seedlings of eight different hosts were tested for aggressiveness on seeds and seedlings of both pine species, including the effects on seedling emergence and mortality. Scots pine was more susceptible to damping‐off than Stone pine, as indicated both by reduced seedling emergence and elevated seedling mortality. The impact of F. oxysporum and F. verticillioides on seeds and seedlings did not differ significantly for either pine species. Our findings support previous studies that found that these are damping‐off pathogens on the studied pines. Whereas most isolates proved to be pathogenic, some isolates of both Fusarium species showed to be non‐pathogenic.