학술논문

Spread of seed-borne Erwinia rhapontici in bean, pea and wheat
Document Type
Original Paper
Source
European Journal of Plant Pathology: Published in cooperation with the European Foundation for Plant Pathology. August 2010 127(4):579-584
Subject
Epidemiology
Erwinia rhapontici
Impact
Pink seed disease
Language
English
ISSN
0929-1873
1573-8469
Abstract
Studies were conducted in the laboratory and greenhouse to determine the distribution of Erwinia rhapontici in plants arising from naturally infected seeds of pea or artificially inoculated seeds of bean and wheat, and whether the pathogen is transmitted to the subsequent generation of seeds. Infected seeds were planted in pots of Cornell mix in the greenhouse, and sampled at specified intervals throughout the plant growth cycle (seedling stage, elongation stage, flowering stage, seed formation stage, and maturity). Plating of surface sterilized lateral roots, tap roots, basal stems, mid-stems, apical stems, petioles, pods, and seeds of pea and bean, and of lateral roots, sub-crown internodes, basal stems, mid-stems, apical stems, peduncles, glumes, and seeds of wheat revealed that the bacterial pathogen spread from infected seeds to the lower parts of the plant tissues, but failed to spread further to the seeds produced on these plants. The study concludes that E. rhapontici did not establish systemic infection throughout the plants. Possible mechanisms of infection of seeds are discussed.