Publication | Closed Access
Differential Selection on <i>Rhynchosporium secalis</i> During Parasitic and Saprophytic Phases in the Barley Scald Disease Cycle
95
Citations
32
References
2006
Year
BotanyGeneticsPlant PathologyPlant-pathogen InteractionPlant HealthDisease CycleParasitologySaprophytic PhasesParasitic FitnessGenetic VariationRhynchosporium Secalis IsolatesDifferential SelectionPlant BreedingBiologyPlant ImmunityPlant-parasite CoevolutionNatural SciencesEvolutionary BiologyCrop ProtectionInduced ResistanceHost ResistanceMedicinePlant Physiology
ABSTRACT Competition among eight Rhynchosporium secalis isolates was assessed during parasitic and saprophytic phases of the disease cycle in field experiments conducted at two locations and over two growing seasons. The eight isolates were inoculated onto six barley populations exhibiting varying degrees of resistance. Microsatellite analysis of 2,866 isolates recovered from the field experiments showed significant, and sometimes opposite, changes in the frequencies of R. secalis genotypes during the growing season (parasitic phase) and between growing seasons (saprophytic phase). Isolates that showed the most complex virulence in greenhouse seedling assays had the lowest fitness in the field experiment. Significant differences in isolate fitness were found on different host populations and in different environments. Selection coefficients were large, indicating that evolution can occur rapidly in field populations. Although inoculated isolates had the lowest overall fitness on the moderately resistant landrace cv. Arabi Aswad, some isolates were more virulent and consistently increased in frequency on this landrace, suggesting a risk of directional selection and possible erosion of the resistance following its widespread deployment in monoculture. These results provide the first direct evidence that R. secalis pathogen genotypes differ in their saprophytic ability and parasitic fitness under field conditions.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1