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Pathogenic variability in Pyricularia grisea at a rice blast "hot spot" breeding site in Eastern Colombia

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Title Pathogenic variability in Pyricularia grisea at a rice blast "hot spot" breeding site in Eastern Colombia
 
Creator Correa Victoria, Fernando J.
Zeigler, Robert S.
 
Subject ORYZA SATIVA
RICE
PYRICULARIA
PATHOGENICITY
VARIETIES
GENETIC VARIATION
ORYZA SATIVA
ARROZ
PYRICULARIA
PATOGENICIDAD
VARIEDADES
VARIACIÓN GENÉTICA
 
Description CIAT- Outstanding Research Publication Award (ORPA) - 1994
Forty-five international races of Pyricularia grisea, representing all nine race groups, were identified in a "hot spot" breeding site (Santa Rosa) in Colombia, with the largest number included in the IA group. The international race system did not fully describe the virulence spectrum of the isolates, since several races could be further differentiated into different pathotypes when local commercial cultivars were used as differentials. Compatibility was present in the pathogen population for at least 13 known resistance genes and resistance sources tested. Frequency of virulent phenotypes on the 42 cultivars tested ranged from 0.0 to 0.86, with no cultivar susceptible to all isolates. The lowest compatibility frequencies were associated with combinations of resistance genes. It was unusual to recover isolates compatible with cultivars K-8, Peta, Ceysvoni, IR-42, Fujisaka 5, Fukunishiki, Zenith, and NP-125. No isolates were recovered that were compatible with the newly released cultivars Oryzica Llanos 4 and 5 developed at this site, and very few infected CICA 9. Analysis of the compatibility frequency of isolates recovered from commercial rice cultivars revealed a marked specialization for cultivar origin. Some cultivars were infected mainly by isolates recovered from the same cultivar. Virulence factors were accumulated in the most virulent isolates, but no isolate was virulent to all rice cultivars. Regardless, matching virulence for all resistance genes is already present in the pathogen population, indicating that new combinations of resistance factors and/or new resistance genes are needed. Rare compatibility with particular cultivars suggests that combinations of certain virulence genes may be associated with poor fitness. Differences in the distribution of virulence genes of P. grisea among and within cultivars support the feasibility of gene deployment strategies.
Peer-reviewed
 
Date 2014-10-02T08:32:58Z
2014-10-02T08:32:58Z
1994
 
Type Journal Article
 
Identifier Correa Victoria, Fernando J.; Zeigler, Robert S. (1994). Pathogenic Variability in Pyricularia grisea at a Rice “Blast Hot” Spot Breeding Site in Eastern Colombia. Plant Disease , 77:1029-1035
0191-2917
https://hdl.handle.net/10568/43929
 
Language en
 
Source Plant Disease