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Wiley InterScience

Plant Pathology

Plant Pathology

Volume 57 Issue 5, Pages 928 - 936

Published Online: 25 May 2008

Journal compilation © 2009 British Society for Plant Pathology



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Selection for decreased sensitivity to phosphite in Phytophthora cinnamomi with prolonged use of fungicide
M. P. Dobrowolski a , B. L. Shearer b , I. J. Colquhoun c , P. A. O'Brien a and G. E. StJ. Hardy a*
  a School of Biological Sciences and Biotechnology, Murdoch University, 90 South Street, Murdoch, WA 6150;   b Science Division, Department of Environment and Conservation, Locked Bag 104, Bentley Delivery Centre, WA 6983; and   c Alcoa World Alumina Australia, Environmental Department, PO Box 172, Pinjarra, WA 6208, Australia
Correspondence to   *E-mail: G.Hardy@murdoch.edu.au
Copyright Journal compilation © 2008 British Society for Plant Pathology
KEYWORDS
avocados • fungicide resistance • oomycetes • phosphonate • selection

ABSTRACT

To test the hypothesis that resistance in Phytophthora cinnamomi to control by the fungicide phosphite (phosphonate) would arise in sites with prolonged use of phosphite, 30 P. cinnamomi isolates were collected from a range of sites with different phosphite-use histories, including phosphite-treated and untreated avocado orchards, and phosphite-treated and untreated native vegetation sites. The colonizing ability of these isolates was tested by different inoculation methods against a range of host tissues, treated and untreated with phosphite, including mycelial stem inoculation on clonally propagated Leucadendron sp., mycelial root inoculation of lupin seedlings and zoospore inoculation of Eucalyptus sieberi cotyledons. Isolates from avocado orchards with a long history of phosphite use were, on average, more extensive colonizers of the phosphite-treated Leucadendron sp., lupin seedling roots and Eucalyptus sieberi cotyledons. These isolates did not colonize untreated plant tissue (Leucadendron sp.) more extensively than isolates from sites with no history of phosphite use and no isolates were resistant to control by phosphite. Analysis of all isolates with microsatellite markers revealed the majority were from a single clonal lineage. Selection for decreased sensitivity to phosphite in planta has taken place within asexual clonal lineages of P. cinnamomi in sites with prolonged use of phosphite.


Published online 25 May 2008

DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/j.1365-3059.2008.01883.x About DOI

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