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Heterodera glycines Infection Increases Incidence and Severity of Brown Stem Rot in Both Resistant and Susceptible Soybean

June 2003 , Volume 87 , Number  6
Pages  655 - 661

G. M. Tabor and G. L. Tylka , Department of Plant Pathology, Iowa State University, Ames 50011 ; J. E. Behm , Monsanto Company, 229 Stanford Parkway, Findlay, OH 45840 ; and C. R. Bronson , Department of Plant Pathology, Iowa State University, Ames



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Accepted for publication 8 January 2003.
ABSTRACT

Growth chamber experiments were conducted to investigate whether parasitism by Heterodera glycines, the soybean cyst nematode, increases incidence and severity of brown stem rot (BSR) of soybean, caused by Phialophora gregata, in both resistant and susceptible soybean cultivars. Soybean genotypes with various combinations of resistance and susceptibility to both pathogens were inoculated with P. gregata alone or P. gregata plus H. glycines. In most tests of H. glycines-susceptible genotypes, incidence and severity of internal stem discoloration, characteristic of BSR, was greater in the presence than in the absence of H. glycines, regardless of susceptibility or resistance to BSR. There was less of an increasing effect of H. glycines on stem symptoms in genotypes resistant to both BSR and H. glycines; however, P. gregata colonization of these genotypes was increased. Stems of both a BSR-resistant and a BSR-susceptible genotype were colonized earlier by P. gregata in the presence than in the absence of H. glycines. Our findings indicate that H. glycines can increase the incidence and severity of BSR in soybean regardless of resistance or susceptibility to either pathogen.


Additional keywords: BSR, pathogen interaction, Phialophora gregata, SCN

© 2003 The American Phytopathological Society