Logo image
Pythium coloratum and P. sulcatum associated with carrot cavity spot disease in Western Australia
Conference presentation

Pythium coloratum and P. sulcatum associated with carrot cavity spot disease in Western Australia

K.A. El-Tarabily, G.E.St.J. Hardy and K. Sivasithamparam
American Phytopathological Society Annual Meeting (Indianapolis, IN, USA, 27/07/1996–31/07/1996)
1996

Abstract

One hundred and seventy Pythium isolates obtained from carrot cavity spot lesions from a field in Western Australia were found to belong to either P. coloratum or P. sulcatum. In laboratory pathogenicity tests on mature carrots, all isolates of P. coloratum produced large brownish-black water soaked and depressed lesions. In comparison, only a few isolates of P. sulcatum produced lesions, all of which were small. In glasshouse pathogenicity trials, P. coloratum produced substantial and numerous lesions at an inoculum density of 0.5% (weight of millet seed-based inoculum/weight of soil), whilst P. sulcatum produced only a few small lesions at inoculum densities of 0.8 and 1% and none at 0.5%. This is the first record of P. coloratum as a casual agent of cavity spot disease of carrots.

Details

Metrics

91 Record Views
Logo image