Studies on the Use of High- and Low-Nutrient Inoculum for Infection of Wheat byGaeumannomyces graminisvar.tritici
- 1 January 1986
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Scientific Societies in Phytopathology®
- Vol. 76 (8) , 815-819
- https://doi.org/10.1094/phyto-76-815
Abstract
A series of pot experiments demonstrated that wheat seedlings can be infected by Gaeumannomyces graminis var. tritici using a low-nutrient source of inoculum (i.e., fungal hyphae adhering to sand grains). It is shown that there is a proportional relationship between disease incidence and inoculum density for levels of inoculum ranging from 23 to 225 units per 100 cm3 of soil and seedlings grown for up to 48 days at 10.degree. C, 45 days at 15.degree. C, or 31 days at 20.degree. C. However, in another experiment where wheat was grown for 28 days at 15.degree. C with inoculum densities ranging from 50 to 1,300 units per 100 cm3 of soil, the relationship between disease incidence and inoculum density became nonproportional, and the disease incidence/inoculum density curve became quadratic. The curve reversed direction at about 900 units per 100 cm3 of soil. In other experiments using colonized millet seed inoculum, disease incidence and inoculum density was proportional up to about eight units (seeds) per 100 cm3, but thereafter the relationship was no longer proportional.This publication has 0 references indexed in Scilit: