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Abstracts of Special Session Presentations

Plant Disease Management
New Technologies, New Challenges in Managing Diseases of Greenhouse Crops

Etiology of Phytophthora drechsleri and P. nicotianae (=P. parasitica) diseases affecting floriculture crops. K. H. Lamour (1), M. L. Daughtrey (2), D. M. Benson (3), J. Hwang (3), and M. K. HAUSBECK (4). (1) University of Tennessee, Knoxville, TN; (2) Cornell University, Riverhead, NY; (3) North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC; (4) Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI. Phytopathology 93:S118. Publication no. P-2003-0146-SSA.

Phytophthora nicotianae and P. drechsleri isolates (N = 413) recovered from eight floricultural hosts at eleven different production sites were described according to compatibility type, resistance to mefenoxam, and amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP) profiles. Sample sizes ranged from 2 to 120. In all cases, isolates recovered from a single facility had the same compatibility type and resistance to mefenoxam. AFLP analysis indicated that six clonal lineages of P. nicotianae and two clonal lineages of P. drechsleri were responsible for the eleven epidemics and that isolates recovered from the same facility were identical. A single clone of P. nicotianae was recovered from snapdragons at two field production sites in the southeastern United States receiving seedlings from the same source. This clone persisted at one site from 2000 to 2001. Another clone was recovered from verbena at three separate greenhouse facilities where one facility was supplying verbena to the other two. These results suggest that asexual reproduction of these pathogens plays an important role in epidemics and spread may occur between distant facilities via movement of plants.

Copyright 2003 by The American Phytopathological Society. All rights reserved.