Screening St. Augustinegrass genotypes for brown patch and large patch disease resistance
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
7-1-2017
Abstract
Two diseases of St. Augustinegrass (SAG) [Stenotaphrum secundatum (Walt.). Ktze.] are caused by different anastomosis groups (AGs) of Rhizoctonia solani. Brown patch (BP) is a foliar disease of little economic importance, and large patch (LP) causes leaf sheath rot and death of affected turfgrass shoots and stolons. St. Augustinegrass genotypes were inoculated with an isolate that causes BP and an isolate that causes LP in repeated experiments. Three disease severity parameters were calculated from data recorded from each genotype, including final disease severity (Y), area under the disease progress curve (AUDPC), and the apparent infection rate (rL). The inoculation protocol reliably produced symptoms, and both rL and AUDPC provided statistically significant separations between genotypes for their susceptibility to BP and LP. A significant interaction between isolate and genotype was observed, and some genotypes that were very susceptible to LP were among the least susceptible to BP. These data suggest that differences in resistance to LP can be quantified in SAG genotypes, but genotype response may be isolate dependent.
Publication Source (Journal or Book title)
Crop Science
First Page
S
Last Page
89
Recommended Citation
Flor, N., Harmon, P., Kenworthy, K., Raid, R., Nagata, R., & Datnoff, L. (2017). Screening St. Augustinegrass genotypes for brown patch and large patch disease resistance. Crop Science, 57, S-89. https://doi.org/10.2135/cropsci2016.06.0514