Susceptibility of Kenyan wheat varieties to head blight, fungal invation and Deoxynivalenol accumulation inoculated with Fusarium graminearum
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Date
2002Author
Muthomi, J W
Orke, E C
Dehne, H W
Mutitu, E W
Type
ArticleLanguage
enMetadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Fifteen wheat varieties commercially grown in Kenya were tested for their susceptibility to head blight and mycotoxin accumulation after inoculation with Fusarium gramineanuu in pot experiments. The strain or the pathogen used had been isolated from wheat collected in different growing areas or Kenya. Head blight suscep¬tibility was assessed as the percentage or spikclcts bleached and area under disease progress curve: kernel colonization by fungal mycelium was determined as ergosterol content. All varieties were round to be moderately to highly susceptible. However. the varieties differed in head blight susceptibility (29-68% or spike¬lets bleached; mean 54%). fungal colonization (67- 187 I'g g ergosterol content: mean III Ilg g) and the resulting mycotoxin contamination [deoxynivalenol (DON) 5-31 JIg g: mean 13.5 I'g g], Grain weight reductions due to head blight ranged from 23 to 57% (mean 44%). The varieties could be therefore divided into partially resistant and highly susceptible genotypes. The kernels or highly susceptible varieties had higher mycotoxin and ergosterol contents. However. the ker¬nels or some varieties contained more fungal mycelium (ergosterol) without the corresponding high amounts or DON. suggesting that they possess some resistance to DON accumulation. Less susceptible varieties showed resistance LO fungal spread. as indicated by a slow disease development and lower content or fungal biomass.
Citation
Journal of Phytopathology Volume 150(1)30-36, 2002Publisher
Department of Plant Science and Crop Protection, University of Nairobi
Subject
DeoxynivalenolErgosterol
Fusarium graminearum
Fusarium scab
Mycotoxins
Resistance
Varieties
Wheat
Description
Journal article