Ecology and diversity of culturable fungal species associated with soybean seedling diseases in the Midwestern United States

Author:

Pimentel Mirian F.1ORCID,Srour Ali Y.2,Warner Amanda J.3,Bond Jason P.1,Bradley Carl A.4,Rupe John5,Chilvers Martin I.6,Rojas J. Alejandro6,Jacobs Janette L.6,Little Christopher R.7,Robertson Alison E.8,Giesler Loren J.9,Malvick Dean10,Wise Kiersten11,Tenuta Albert12,Fakhoury Ahmad M.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Agricultural Sciences Southern Illinois University Carbondale Illinois USA

2. USDA, ARS, New England Plant, Soil, and Water Laboratory Orono Maine USA

3. Syngenta Crop Protection Raleigh-Durham North Carolina USA

4. Department of Plant Pathology University of Kentucky Research and Educational Center Princeton Kentucky USA

5. Department of Entomology and Plant Pathology University of Arkansas Fayetteville Arkansas USA

6. Department of Plant, Soil and Microbial Sciences Michigan State University East Lansing Michigan USA

7. Department of Plant Pathology Kansas State University Manhattan Kansas USA

8. Department of Plant Pathology and Microbiology Iowa State University Ames Iowa USA

9. Department of Plant Pathology University of Nebraska-Lincoln Lincoln Nebraska USA

10. Department of Plant Pathology University of Minnesota Minneapolis Minnesota USA

11. Department of Botany and Plant Pathology Purdue University West Lafayette Indiana USA

12. Ontario Ministry of Agriculture Food and Rural Affairs (OMAFRA) Ridgetown Ontario USA

Abstract

Abstract Aims To isolate and characterize fungi associated with diseased soybean seedlings in Midwestern soybean production fields and to determine the influence of environmental and edaphic factors on their incidence. Methods and Results Seedlings were collected from fields with seedling disease history in 2012 and 2013 for fungal isolation. Environmental and edaphic data associated with each field was collected. 3036 fungal isolates were obtained and assigned to 76 species. The most abundant genera recovered were Fusarium (73%) and Trichoderma (11.2%). Other genera included Mortierella, Clonostachys, Rhizoctonia, Alternaria, Mucor, Phoma, Macrophomina and Phomopsis. Most recovered species are known soybean pathogens. However, non-pathogenic organisms were also isolated. Crop history, soil density, water source, precipitation and temperature were the main factors influencing the abundance of fungal species. Conclusion Key fungal species associated with soybean seedling diseases occurring in several US production regions were characterized. This work also identified major environment and edaphic factors affecting the abundance and occurrence of these species. Significance and Impact of the Study The identification and characterization of the main pathogens associated with seedling diseases across major soybean-producing areas could help manage those pathogens, and devise more effective and sustainable practices to reduce the damage they cause.

Funder

North Central Soybean Research Program

United Soybean Board

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,General Medicine,Biotechnology

Reference74 articles.

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