Soil Is Not a Reservoir for Phellinus noxius

Author:

Wu Zong-Chi1,Chang Ya-Yun1,Lai Qiao-Juan1,Lin Heng-An1,Tzean Shean-Shong1,Liou Ruey-Fen1,Tsai Isheng J.2,Chung Chia-Lin1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Plant Pathology and Microbiology, National Taiwan University, Taipei City 10617, Taiwan

2. Biodiversity Research Center, Academia Sinica, Taipei City 11529, Taiwan

Abstract

Phellinus noxius causes brown root rot (BRR) of diverse trees. Basidiospores and diseased host tissues have been recognized as important sources of P. noxius inoculum. This study aimed to understand whether P. noxius could occur or survive in soil without host tissues in the natural environment. Soil was sampled before and after the removal of diseased trees at eight BRR infection sites (total of 44 samples). No P. noxius colonies were recovered in soil plating assays, suggesting that no or little viable P. noxius resided in the soil. To know whether P. noxius could disseminate from decayed roots to the surrounding soil, rhizosphere and non-rhizosphere soils were sampled from another two infection sites. Although P. noxius DNA was detectable with specific primers, no P. noxius could be isolated, even from the rhizosphere soils around decayed roots covered with P. noxius mycelial mats. The association between viable P. noxius and the presence of its DNA was also investigated using field soil mixed with P. noxius arthrospores. After P. noxius was exterminated by flooding or fumigation treatment, its DNA remained detectable for a few weeks. The potential of onsite soil as an inoculum was tested using the highly susceptible loquat (Eriobotrya japonica). Loquats replanted in an infection site that had been cleaned up by simply removing the diseased stump and visible residual roots remained healthy for a year. Taken together, P. noxius is not a soilborne pathogen, and diseased host tissues should be the focus of field sanitation and detection for BRR.

Publisher

Scientific Societies

Subject

Plant Science,Agronomy and Crop Science

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