Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published bySibyl Horton Modified over 9 years ago
1
Plant Disease threats for 2009 Wheat viruses Stem rust Dr. Mary Burrows Montana State University, Bozeman, MT
2
WSMV: The Pathogen Family Potyviridae, genus Tritimovirus Mite-transmitted virus
3
Wheat streak mosaic virus Infects both winter and spring wheat –Symptoms in spring Earlier infection = greater yield loss Grassy weeds, volunteer wheat, corn, etc. can harbor both WSMV and the mite vector 5-10% yield loss/yr across Great Plains 100% yield loss in individual fields SDSU Extension
4
No chemical controls are effective for control of mite or virus
5
The life cycle of mite-transmitted wheat viruses
6
Weed Host: Volunteer Wheat
7
WSMV in Montana weeds Volunteer wheat is the best non-crop host, but weed species are also are infected with virus and may serve as a source
8
Which weeds are susceptible? Common nameLiterature 1 ELISA 2 Jointed goatgrassYesLocal Wild oatYes+ Downy BromeYesLocal Crested WheatgrassNo- Thickspike Wheatgrass No- QuackgrassNo+ Slender WheatgrassNo- Smooth BromeNo- BarnyardgrassYes+ Green FoxtailYes- 1 WSMV host data taken from Somsen 1970, Townsend 1996, and Brey, 1998. 2 Data from MSU: 'Local' = Virus restricted to inoculated leaves in preliminary assay
9
Regional variation in the susceptibility of weeds to WSMV
10
Increase in regional virus incidence? Host PathogenEnvironment ( New York Times) SDSU Extension Vector
11
Determine prevalence of wheat viruses in the Great Plains (WSMV, HPV, TriMV, BYDV-PAV and CYDV-RPV)Determine prevalence of wheat viruses in the Great Plains (WSMV, HPV, TriMV, BYDV-PAV and CYDV-RPV) Nine states:Nine states: WY, MT, CO, KS, OK, TX, SD, ND, NE Determine geographic distribution for TriMV & HPVDetermine geographic distribution for TriMV & HPV Determine if host symptoms are diagnostic among virus species for single and multiple infectionsDetermine if host symptoms are diagnostic among virus species for single and multiple infections Collect and provide virus infected plant tissues to support research effortsCollect and provide virus infected plant tissues to support research efforts Increase communication about wheat viruses in the Great Plains RegionIncrease communication about wheat viruses in the Great Plains Region Wheat virus survey, 2008: Objectives
12
WSMV 43 38 40 28 39 62 27 Range:28 – 83 Range:28 – 83 Mean:47 Mean:47 % samples infected 61 83
13
HPV 9 19 12 7 8 Range:7 - 41 Range:7 - 41 Mean:19 Mean:19 % samples infected 10 41 38 30
14
TriMV 0 24 0 2 6 Range:0 - 57 Range:0 - 57 Mean:17 Mean:17 % samples infected 27 30 10 57
15
mixed 37 WSMV +HPV WSM+ TriMV HPV+TriMV 9 8 15 8 7 9 5 16 0 0 0 0 2 1 18 5 21 13 4 353 28 8 0 10 10
16
Objective: Objective: Determine prevalence of wheat viruses WSMV detected in all GPDN states at high percentage infection (27 – 83 %)WSMV detected in all GPDN states at high percentage infection (27 – 83 %) HPV detected in all GPDN statesHPV detected in all GPDN states HPV identified in MT and WY for the first timeHPV identified in MT and WY for the first time TriMV identified in CO, KS, NE, OK, SD, TX, WYTriMV identified in CO, KS, NE, OK, SD, TX, WY TriMV not detected in MT and NDTriMV not detected in MT and ND
19
Race Evolution in TTKS (Ug99) Lineage & Implications to Resistance Breeding Yue Jin, USDA-ARS
20
Ug99 First reported in Uganda in 1999 --Pretorius et al. 2000 Plant Dis 84:203 Virulent on Sr31 Sr31 is located on 1BL.1RS translocation. Also carries Lr26, Yr9. Increased adaptation and higher yield. As a result, widely spread in wheat worldwide. Helped to reduce stem rust population worldwide. Virulence to Yr9, originated in the eastern Africa in mid 80s, caused worldwide epidemics.
21
TTKS In 2002 and 2004, CIMMYT nursery planted in Njoro, Kenya were severely infected by stem rust. In 2005, we identified Kenyan isolates from 2004 were race TTKS. --Wanyera, Kinyua, Jin, Singh 2006 Plant Dis 90:113
22
Broad virulence of TTKS to North American spring wheat US spring wheat CVs of the Northern Great Plains, known to have broad-based resistance to stem rust, were mostly susceptible (84%). 500 CIMMYT CVs released since 1950’s, 84% were susceptible. Conclusion: Ug99 possesses a unique virulence combination that renders many resistance genes ineffective. Jin & Singh, 2006, Plant Dis:90:476-480
23
Projected potential pathways for Ug99 based on the migration of Yr9 virulence Singh et al. 2006. CAB Review 1, 54
24
Ug99 migration Singh et al. 2008. Advances in Agronomy v98 1998 2001? 2004 2003? 2005 2006 2007
25
Evolution of the TTKS lineage TTKSK TTTSKTTKST Sr24- Sr31+ Sr36- Sr24+ Sr31+ Sr36- Sr24- Sr31+ Sr36+ Our data point to: Jin et al. 2008. Plant Dis. 92:923-926 Jin et al. 2009. Plant Dis. (in Press)
26
% of resistance to TypeEntryTTKSKTTKSTTTTSK (Ug99)Sr24vSr36v Hard red spring8921%12%21% Hard red winter41629%15%28% Soft red winter37727%25%11% Western wheat603%3%3% Total94226%18%19% Ramification of Sr24/Sr36 virulence to US Wheat based on testing of 2007 elite breeding germplasm
27
The good news Phil and Luther are both working on it already! Li Huang, PSPP, is starting to map genes for resistance Fungicide trials with great results Communication and education ramping up!
28
Wheat stem rust fungicide trial results (2008) Stein and Gupta, SDSU Stem rust (% leaf area)
29
Triazoles Triazole + Strobilurin
30
Fungicide modes of action: Triazoles FRAC group 3 DMI (demethylation) inhibitors; biosynthesis of sterols in fungal cell membrane; spore penetration and mycelial growth Provides 14-21 days of protection Medium risk of resistance development Greater mobility in plant than strobilurin fungicides Most widely used class of fungicide in the world Control a wide array of fungal diseases Protective and curative effects (if applied early in disease development)
31
Fungicide movement in the plant From: Tenuta, A., D. Hershman, M. Draper and A. Dorrence. 2007. Using foliar fungicides to manage soybean rust.. Land-Grant Universities Cooperating NCERA-208 and OMAF. Available online at http://www.oardc.ohio- state.edu/SoyRust/
32
20 July, 2009, Fort Ellis stem rust fungicide trial (14 d after fungicide application, 45 d after pathogen inoculation) Control Triazole Strobilurin
33
20 July, 2009, Fort Ellis stem rust fungicide trial (14 d after fungicide application, 45 d after pathogen inoculation) Control Strobilurin Triazole
34
28 July, 2009, Fort Ellis stem rust fungicide trial (22 d after fungicide application, 53 d after pathogen inoculation) Spreader rowTriazole + Strobilurin
35
Fungicide modes of action: Strobilurins FRAC group 11 QoI (quinone outside) inhibitors (respiration); spore germination, penetration, and mycelial growth Provides 14-21 days of protection High risk of resistance development because it has a very specific mode of action (they block electron transfer at the site of quinol oxidation (the Qo site) in the cytochrome bc 1 complex, thus preventing ATP formation) Originally isolated from wood-rotting fungi Strobilurus tenacellus ‘Reduced-risk’ pesticide (pose less risk to human health than other chemical options at the time of registration by EPA) Control a wide array of fungal diseases Excellent preventative fungicides, but limited curative effects “Plant health benefit” independent of disease control?
36
Figure 1. Mobility of trifloxystrobin, an example of a QoI fungicide. http://www.apsnet.org/education/AdvancedPlantPath/Topics/Strobilurin/top.htm
37
Preventing fungicide resistance Limit the number of applications of a single FRAC group per season Limit the number of consecutive applications of a single FRAC group Mix fungicides with different modes of action (FRAC groups) Use early in disease development
38
Acknowledgements Dai Ito, graduate student Yue Jin, UMN Jeff Stein, SDSU
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.