Title of article :
Assessment of Swiss Needle Cast Disease: Temporal and Spatial Investigations of Fungal Colonization and Symptom Severity
Author/Authors :
D. K. MANTER، نويسنده , , L. M. Winton ، نويسنده , , G. M. Filip and J. K. Stone، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Abstract :
Increasing severity of Swiss needle cast (SNC), a foliar
disease of Douglas-fir caused by the fungus Phaeocryptopus
gaeumannii, has become a matter of concern in
forest plantations throughout coastal Oregon and
Washington. This study monitored SNC disease in
three Oregon Douglas-fir plantations bi-annually in
1998–1999, and compared differences in fungal colonization
and symptom development in trees from northand
south-facing plots at each plantation. Fungal
colonization as quantified by ergosterol content,
pseudothecia density and quantitative PCR was significantly
correlated with symptom severity (needle retention
and needle cholorosis). All three measures of
fungal colonization were highly correlated with each
other; and only the ergosterol–pseudothecia relationship
differed between plots, presumably due to the
non-species specific nature of ergosterol measurements.
Differences in symptom severity and fungal colonization
between north- and south-aspect plots were consistent
with climate differences. At low to moderate
levels of infection, trees growing on warmer (i.e. south
slopes in the western, and north slopes in the eastern
Coast Range) slopes had higher levels of colonization,
particularly during the winter months. Plots with
southern exposures, which received greater amounts of
solar radiation, had greater amounts of needle abscission
compared to north-aspect plots with similar
amounts of fungal colonization. As a result, greater
fungal abundance and symptom expression developed
on south-aspect slopes within the Oregon Coast
Range
Keywords :
Phaeocryptopus gaeumannii , Pseudotsuga menziesii , forest disease , epidemiology
Journal title :
Journal of Phytopathology
Journal title :
Journal of Phytopathology