Specificity of Interactions Between Wild Lactuca spp. and Bremia lactucae Isolates from Lactuca serriola
- 1 September 1986
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Phytopathology
- Vol. 117 (1) , 54-64
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1439-0434.1986.tb04360.x
Abstract
Specificity of interactions between eight Lactuca species and 8 Bremia lactucae isolates was studied in seedlings and adult plants of 36 Lactuca accessions plus one L. serriola × L. sativa hybrid. Pathogenicity of the isolates and/or plant susceptibility was expressed by sporulation intensity.A highly compatible relationship was observed in all of L. serriola accession/isolate interactions tested. A differential reaction was found in numerous cases testifying to physiological specialization of the pathogen in a wild pathosystem. Nonspecific nondifferential compatibility (quantitative resistance) can be expected in L. serriola PI 281876. Age dependent resistance (seedlings versus adult plants, and vice versa) and heterogeneity of reactions were also recorded. The comparisonof B. lactucae isolates from L. sativa and L. serriola has shown a significant shift of pathogenicity in favour of L. serriola accessions. A high level of resistance was found in the L. serriola × L. sativa hybrid.The existence of basic incompatibility can be expected in L. saligna and L. virosa as well as in such taxonomically remote species as L. viminea, L. squarrosa and L. biennis. Other taxonomically remote species, i.e. L. dentata and L. alpina, exhibited a compatible reaction, although the reaction of the former was differential. A high level of sporulation was recorded in all accession/isolate interactions of L. alpina.This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
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