Previous View
 
APSnet Home
 
Plant Disease Home


VIEW ARTICLE

Research.

Survival of Phytophthora lateralis in Infected Roots of Port Orford Cedar. E. M. Hansen, Department of Botany and Plant Pathology, Oregon State University, Corvallis 97331-2902. P. B. Hamm, Botany and Plant Pathology, Oregon State University, Hermiston Agric. Res. and Ext. Center, Hermiston 97838. Plant Dis. 80:1075-1078. Accepted for publication 18 June 1996. Copyright 1996 The American Phytopathological Society. DOI: 10.1094/PD-80-1075.

Short-term and long-term survival of Phytophthora lateralis in infected Port Orford cedar rootlets in soil was tested under a variety of conditions. Survival was measured by baiting infected rootlets with cedar foliage baits or by planting cedar seedlings into the infested soil. On the temperature gradient plate, recovery after 7 and 18 days at 10°C was near 100%, but reisolation was sharply reduced from moist soil at 20 and 30°C, and there was no recovery at 40°C. In soil allowed to air-dry at the various temperatures, there was no recovery at 20°C or above. Outdoors, the fungus survived at least 7 days in rootlets buried 10 cm deep in dry soil, and in rootlets on the soil surface, if shaded. There was no recovery from rootlets exposed to the sun. Temperatures did not exceed 25°C in any treatment where the fungus was recovered. Long-term survival of P. lateralis in infected cedar roots was tested in litter bags buried in forest and cold frame conditions, and in intact root systems of cedar trees killed by P. lateralis. Direct isolation onto selective medium was attempted from forest trees killed at different times in the past. P. lateralis was not isolated from any tree dead for more than 2 years. The fungus was recovered by baiting from litter bags after 5 years but not after 6 years, and from root systems in buried pots through the 7 years of the test. Rate of recovery was sharply reduced in the last year in both cases.