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Canola Growth Stage at Time of Infection Determines Magnitude of White Leaf Spot (Neopseudocercosporella capsellae) Impact.

Tamsal MurtzaMing Pei YouMartin J Barbetti
Published in: Plant disease (2021)
White leaf spot (Neopseudocercosporella capsellae) is a persistent and increasingly important foliar disease for canola (Brassica napus) across southern Australia. To define the role of plant growth stage in the development of disease epidemics, we first investigated the response of different canola cultivars (Scoop and Charlton) at five Sylvester-Bradley growth stages against N. capsellae. White leaf spot disease incidence and severity was dependent on plant growth stage and cultivar (both P < 0.001), with plants being most susceptible at plant growth stage 1.00 (cotyledon stage) followed by plant growth stage 1.04 (fourth leaf stage). Then, to quantify the impact of this disease on canola yield, we investigated the in-field relationship of white leaf spot disease incidence and severity with seed yield loss following artificial inoculation commencing at growth stage 1.04 (fourth leaf stage). White leaf spot significantly (P < 0.001) reduced seed yield by 24% in N. capsellae inoculated field plots compared with noninoculated field plots. To our knowledge, this is the first time that serious seed yield losses from this disease have been quantified in the field. The current study demonstrates that N. capsellae disease incidence and severity on canola is determined by host growth stage at which pathogen infestation occurs. Emerging seedling cotyledons were highly susceptible, followed by less susceptibility in first true leaves to emerge, but then increasing susceptibility as plants subsequently aged toward the fourth leaf stage. This explains field observances where white leaf spot readily establishes on emerging seedlings and subsequently becomes more prevalent and severe as plants age.
Keyphrases
  • plant growth
  • risk factors
  • healthcare
  • early onset
  • transcription factor