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Publication no. D-2000-0828-01R
Oospore Survival and Pathogenicity of Single Oospore Recombinant Progeny from
a Cross Involving US-17 and US-8 Genotypes of Phytophthora infestans.
H. Mayton, C. D. Smart, B. C. Moravec, E. S. G. Mizubuti, A. E. Muldoon, and W.
E. Fry, Department of Plant Pathology, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853.
Plant Dis. 84:1190-1196. Accepted for publication 24 July 2000. Copyright 2000
The American Phytopathological Society.
Oospores of Phytophthora infestans produced in vitro and in planta, from
a cross between US-17 and US-8 genotypes, were exposed to a variety of
environments and their survival was assessed. Additionally, the pathogenic
characteristics of some resultant progeny isolates were assessed. Viability of
oospores as measured by plasmolysis declined slightly over a period of 18 months
whether they were stored in water at 4°C, in soil at 18°C, or in soil under
natural field conditions. In comparison, viability as measured by germination
was lower overall but appeared to increase after storage in soil. Oospores
produced in planta were buried in the field in the fall of 1998, and were
capable of infecting both tomato and potato leaflets when recovered in May 1999.
Single oospore progeny (n = 53) from the in vitro cross were analyzed
individually for genetic and pathogenicity characteristics. All 53 progeny
tested for restriction fragment length polymorphisms with probe RG57 were
hybrids. All but one progeny produced sporulating lesions on detached potato or
tomato leaflets in growth chamber tests, but most lesions were smaller and
developed more slowly than those produced by either parental isolate. In a
further test of pathogenicity, under field conditions, none of a subset of 10 A2
progeny was capable of initiating a detectable epidemic in small plots of either
potatoes or tomatoes.
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