Title of article :
Influence of Growth Stage on Fusarium Head Blight and Deoxynivalenol Production in Wheat
Author/Authors :
E. M. DEL PONTE، نويسنده , , J. M. C. FERNANDES and G. C. BERGSTROM، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Abstract :
Fusarium head blight is a major concern for wheat
production worldwide. The fungi that cause the disease
may infect head tissues from flowering to late stages of
kernel development, but a better understanding of the
influence of the time of infection on grain weight reduction
and mycotoxin accumulation resulting from the
infection process is needed. We investigated the influence
of wheat reproductive stage at the time of inoculation
on disease and grain quality parameters, especially
production of deoxynivalenol (DON) in mature grains.
Heads of Norm wheat were spray inoculated with a
macroconidial suspension of a DON-producing isolate
of Fusarium graminearum at each of six reproductive
stages from flowering to hard dough. Plants were incubated
in a mist chamber for 48 h and then moved to
the greenhouse until maturity. Norm wheat was susceptible
at all stages inoculated but the highest grain
weight reduction and DON accumulation occurred in
plants inoculated past flowering to late milk stages.
However, high incidences of kernel infection and significant
levels of DON accumulation resulted from inoculations
as late as the hard dough stage, even though
there was no corresponding reduction in grain weight
compared to non-inoculated plants. The occurrence of
commercially significant levels of DON in plump, highyielding
wheat may result from infections that occur
during favourable environments well after the flowering
stages. Late infection and DON production should
therefore be a future research focus for wheat breeding
and integrated management of FHB and an important
consideration for grading systems that employ the presence
of visibly damaged kernels as a means of estimating
DON content of wheat.
Keywords :
Gibberella zeae , tricothecenes , Fungal infection , toxigenic fungi , food safety
Journal title :
Journal of Phytopathology
Journal title :
Journal of Phytopathology