Distribution of Baseline Sensitivities to Azoxystrobin Among Isolates of Plasmopara viticola
Open Access
- 1 March 2000
- journal article
- Published by Scientific Societies in Plant Disease
- Vol. 84 (3) , 275-281
- https://doi.org/10.1094/pdis.2000.84.3.275
Abstract
An excised leaf disc assay was developed for determining the sensitivity of isolates of Plasmopara viticola (causal agent of grapevine downy mildew) to the strobilurin fungicide azoxystrobin. Five repeated assays with the same five single-sporangiophore isolates showed that the technique yielded reproducible results; that is, coefficients of variation ranged from 4.0 to 20% (mean 12%) for effective doses for 50% control (ED50 values) based on disease incidence and from 4.4 to 14% (mean 8.1%) for ED50 values based on disease severity. Then, the assay was applied to 81 single-sporangiophore isolates of P. viticola collected from 10 geographically distinct vineyards in western New York, providing a baseline distribution of sensitivities within this population. For disease incidence, individual ED50 values ranged from 0.05 to 0.94 μg/ml (mean 0.40 μg/ml), whereas for disease severity they ranged from 0.04 to 0.78 μg/ml (mean 0.24 μg/ml). When 61 of these isolates were similarly tested at a single discriminatory dose of 0.50 μg/ml, azoxystrobin provided 61% control of disease incidence versus 41 and 1.1% control for trifloxystrobin and kresoximmethyl, respectively; for disease severity (colony diameter), azoxystrobin provided 80% control versus 57 and 1.1% control for trifloxystrobin and kresoximmethyl, respectively. These results provide information that can be utilized in future monitoring of P. viticola resistance to azoxystrobin and indicate differences in the intrinsic activities of the three strobilurin fungicides against this pathogen.Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- Baseline Sensitivities of Venturia inaequalis Populations to the Strobilurin Fungicide Kresoxim-methylPlant Disease, 1999
- Kresoxim - methyl: Modification of a Naturally Occurring Compound to Produce a New FungicidePlant Disease, 1999
- Pesticide resistance: assessment of risk and the development and implementation of effective management strategies†Pesticide Science, 1998
- Sensitivity profiles ofMycosphaerella graminicolaandPhytophthora infestanspopulations to different classes of fungicidesPesticide Science, 1997
- Distributions of Sensitivities to Three Sterol Demethylation Inhibitor Fungicides Among Populations ofUncinula necatorSensitive and Resistant to TriadimefonPhytopathology®, 1997
- Alternative Respiration: a Biochemical Mechanism of Resistance to Azoxystrobin (ICIA 5504) inSeptoria triticiPesticide Science, 1997
- Sensitivity Distribution ofVenturia inaequalisto the Sterol Demethylation Inhibitor Flusilazole: Baseline Sensitivity and Implications for Resistance MonitoringPhytopathology®, 1991
- Mucidin and strobilurin A are identical and inhibit electron transfer in the cytochrome bc1 complex of the mitochondrial respiratory chain at the same site as myxothiazolBiochemistry, 1986
- Resistance of Botrytis cinerea Pers. and Plasmopara viticola (Berk. & Curt.) Berl. and de Toni to fungicides in French vineyardsCrop Protection, 1985
- Oudemansin, strobilurin A, strobilurin B and myxothiazol: new inhibitors of the bc1 segment of the respiratory chain with an E‐β‐methoxyacrylate system as common structural elementFEBS Letters, 1981