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Relative Competitiveness and Virulence of Four Clonal Lineages of Cephalosporium maydis from Egypt Toward Greenhouse-Grown Maize

April 2002 , Volume 86 , Number  4
Pages  373 - 378

Kurt A. Zeller , Department of Plant Pathology, Throckmorton Plant Sciences Center, Kansas State University, Manhattan 66506-5502 ; Abou-Serie M. Ismael , Elhamy M. El-Assiuty , Zeinab M. Fahmy , and Fawzia M. Bekheet , Maize, Sorghum and Sugar Diseases Section, Plant Pathology Research Institute, Agricultural Research Center, 9 Gamaa Street, Giza, Egypt ; and John F. Leslie , Department of Plant Pathology, Kansas State University, Manhattan 66506-5502



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Accepted for publication 26 November 2001.
ABSTRACT

Four clonal lineages of Cephalosporium maydis, a soilborne vascular wilt pathogen that causes late wilt of maize, were differentiated previously with molecular markers. In Egypt, this fungus can cause significant losses in infected susceptible plants. In greenhouse tests of individual isolates we found that these lineages differ in their virulence toward a series of maize accessions commonly used in Egyptian maize breeding programs. We also determined the relative competitiveness of representatives of the four lineages when incorporated into the soil as a mixed inoculum. The lineage (IV) with greatest mean disease incidence (virulence), when tested alone, was the least competitive on susceptible maize accessions when coinoculated as a component of mixed inocula of all four lineages. In these coinoculation experiments, one of the less-virulent lineages (II) dominated (70% of infections) and appeared to be the most competitive. These results suggest that virulence and competitive ability are not the same in this host-pathogen system. These results also suggest that standard protocols that rely on mixed inocula for resistance screening need to be altered, and that the relative proportion of the different lineages of the pathogen recovered in a field may be influenced by the maize variety/hybrid planted.


Additional keywords: AFLP, late wilt, stalk rot, Zea mays

© 2002 The American Phytopathological Society