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September 17, 2019

Field adult plant disease resistance can be assessed in young oilseed rape plants

Credit: University of Hertfordshire
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Credit: University of Hertfordshire

New research into crop disease resistance in oilseed rape by a research team at the University of Hertfordshire has been published online this week by journal PLOS ONE.

Protecting crops from catastrophic yield losses caused by is a major goal of agriculture to safeguard global food security in response to growing concerns about food shortages and climate change.

Use of crop resistance is one of the most economical methods of controlling crop diseases. Phoma stem canker, also known as blackleg disease, is a disease responsible for annual losses worth more than £1,000 million in across the world. The disease is caused by the fungal pathogen Leptosphaeria maculans. The pathogen first infects the leaves of oilseed rape in autumn (October/November), causing phoma leaf spot lesions, then grows symptomlessly along the leaf midrib and petiole to reach the stem, causing damaging phoma stem cankers in spring/summer (April-July) that result in yield losses.

Currently, selection of cultivars with quantitative resistance has relied on assessment of crop disease severity at the end of growing season. It has been difficult to investigate quantitative resistance against the growth of this pathogen in leaves and petioles or in stems before the appearance of stem canker symptoms under field crop conditions due to the long period of symptomless growth after initial leaf infection.

Being able to measure resistance against this pathogen in young oilseed rape plants will not only accelerate the process of breeding new durable resistant oilseed rape varieties, but will also save money for the industry by reducing the costs of field experiments for breeders and reducing the use of fungicides to control this for farmers.

This is the first research, by a team of researchers led by the University of Hertfordshire, to demonstrate that the measurement of resistance against the growth of the phoma stem canker pathogen L. maculans in the leaves of young plants in controlled environments can be used to detect resistance in adult plants under field conditions.

The paper "Oilseed (Brassica napus) resistance to growth of Leptosphaeria maculans in leaves of young plants contributes to quantitative resistance in stems of adult plants," is based on results four controlled environment experiments and 11 field experiments in collaboration with scientists at INRA, France, and has just been published online by PLOS ONE.

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More information: Yong-Ju Huang et al. Oilseed rape (Brassica napus) resistance to growth of Leptosphaeria maculans in leaves of young plants contributes to quantitative resistance in stems of adult plants, PLOS ONE (2019).

Journal information: PLoS ONE

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