Fungal population in wheat cultivars with different degrees of susceptibility to cereal soil-borne mosaic virus.

Cereal soil-borne mosaic virus is widespread in Italy, especially in the northern and central regions, where it is known to cause grain yield reductions of up to 70% on the most susceptible cultivars of hexaploid wheat and durum wheat. Following reports indicating that the spread of FHB is greater i...

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Main Authors: PRODI, ANTONIO, PISI, ANNAMARIA, RUBIES AUTONELL, CONCEPCION, TONTI, STEFANO, SANDALO, SILVIA, NIPOTI, PAOLA, C. Lanzoni, D. Rovito
Other Authors: Prodi A., A. Pisi, C. Rubies Autonell, S. Tonti, S. Sandalo, P. Nipoti
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11585/64788
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author PRODI, ANTONIO
PISI, ANNAMARIA
RUBIES AUTONELL, CONCEPCION
TONTI, STEFANO
SANDALO, SILVIA
NIPOTI, PAOLA
C. Lanzoni
D. Rovito
author2 Prodi A.
A. Pisi
C. Rubies Autonell
S. Tonti
S. Sandalo
C. Lanzoni
P. Nipoti
D. Rovito
author_facet PRODI, ANTONIO
PISI, ANNAMARIA
RUBIES AUTONELL, CONCEPCION
TONTI, STEFANO
SANDALO, SILVIA
NIPOTI, PAOLA
C. Lanzoni
D. Rovito
author_sort PRODI, ANTONIO
collection Unknown
description Cereal soil-borne mosaic virus is widespread in Italy, especially in the northern and central regions, where it is known to cause grain yield reductions of up to 70% on the most susceptible cultivars of hexaploid wheat and durum wheat. Following reports indicating that the spread of FHB is greater in plants infected by barley yellow dwarf virus (BYDV) than in BYDV-free ones, we investigated the possibility of an analogous correlation between CSBMV and fungi having antagonistic and/or toxigenic activity. Four cultivars of bread wheat (Artico, Trofeo, Agadir, and Isengrain) and four of durum wheat (Neodur, Provenzal, Claudio, and Orobel), exhibiting a wide range of reactions to CSBMV, were grown in a in field near Cadriano (northern Italy) with natural inoculum sources of this virus. Mycoflora composition was investigated (CFU/g) in the rhizosphere soil and, towards the end of the wheat growth cycle, also in roots, stems, and seeds. Fusaria species were identified molecularly. The fungi isolated from the soil were mostly saprophytes. Penicillium was found mainly in May, whereas Fusaria were most abundant in July; the antagonistic Trichoderma was not detected. Fusaria were detected in the seeds of all cultivars and were most abundant in durum wheat cultivars Orobel (17%), susceptible to CSBMV, and Provenzal (12%), resistant to the virus. Several Fusarium species were identified: F. culmorum prevailed in durum wheat and F. poae in bread wheat. Preliminary data suggest that there is no correlation between fungal colonization and susceptibility to CSBMV of the withering plants. Further studies are in progress.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
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genre_facet artico
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institution Open Polar
language English
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op_relation volume:54
firstpage:77
lastpage:78
numberofpages:2
journal:ANNUAL WHEAT NEWSLETTER
http://hdl.handle.net/11585/64788
publishDate 2008
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spelling ftunibolognairis:oai:cris.unibo.it:11585/64788 2025-06-15T14:22:39+00:00 Fungal population in wheat cultivars with different degrees of susceptibility to cereal soil-borne mosaic virus. PRODI, ANTONIO PISI, ANNAMARIA RUBIES AUTONELL, CONCEPCION TONTI, STEFANO SANDALO, SILVIA NIPOTI, PAOLA C. Lanzoni D. Rovito Prodi A. A. Pisi C. Rubies Autonell S. Tonti S. Sandalo C. Lanzoni P. Nipoti D. Rovito 2008 STAMPA http://hdl.handle.net/11585/64788 eng eng volume:54 firstpage:77 lastpage:78 numberofpages:2 journal:ANNUAL WHEAT NEWSLETTER http://hdl.handle.net/11585/64788 DURUM WHEAT SOILBORNE CEREAL MOSAIC VIRUS MYCOFLORA ITALY info:eu-repo/semantics/article 2008 ftunibolognairis 2025-05-28T08:22:19Z Cereal soil-borne mosaic virus is widespread in Italy, especially in the northern and central regions, where it is known to cause grain yield reductions of up to 70% on the most susceptible cultivars of hexaploid wheat and durum wheat. Following reports indicating that the spread of FHB is greater in plants infected by barley yellow dwarf virus (BYDV) than in BYDV-free ones, we investigated the possibility of an analogous correlation between CSBMV and fungi having antagonistic and/or toxigenic activity. Four cultivars of bread wheat (Artico, Trofeo, Agadir, and Isengrain) and four of durum wheat (Neodur, Provenzal, Claudio, and Orobel), exhibiting a wide range of reactions to CSBMV, were grown in a in field near Cadriano (northern Italy) with natural inoculum sources of this virus. Mycoflora composition was investigated (CFU/g) in the rhizosphere soil and, towards the end of the wheat growth cycle, also in roots, stems, and seeds. Fusaria species were identified molecularly. The fungi isolated from the soil were mostly saprophytes. Penicillium was found mainly in May, whereas Fusaria were most abundant in July; the antagonistic Trichoderma was not detected. Fusaria were detected in the seeds of all cultivars and were most abundant in durum wheat cultivars Orobel (17%), susceptible to CSBMV, and Provenzal (12%), resistant to the virus. Several Fusarium species were identified: F. culmorum prevailed in durum wheat and F. poae in bread wheat. Preliminary data suggest that there is no correlation between fungal colonization and susceptibility to CSBMV of the withering plants. Further studies are in progress. Article in Journal/Newspaper artico Unknown
spellingShingle DURUM WHEAT
SOILBORNE CEREAL MOSAIC VIRUS
MYCOFLORA
ITALY
PRODI, ANTONIO
PISI, ANNAMARIA
RUBIES AUTONELL, CONCEPCION
TONTI, STEFANO
SANDALO, SILVIA
NIPOTI, PAOLA
C. Lanzoni
D. Rovito
Fungal population in wheat cultivars with different degrees of susceptibility to cereal soil-borne mosaic virus.
title Fungal population in wheat cultivars with different degrees of susceptibility to cereal soil-borne mosaic virus.
title_full Fungal population in wheat cultivars with different degrees of susceptibility to cereal soil-borne mosaic virus.
title_fullStr Fungal population in wheat cultivars with different degrees of susceptibility to cereal soil-borne mosaic virus.
title_full_unstemmed Fungal population in wheat cultivars with different degrees of susceptibility to cereal soil-borne mosaic virus.
title_short Fungal population in wheat cultivars with different degrees of susceptibility to cereal soil-borne mosaic virus.
title_sort fungal population in wheat cultivars with different degrees of susceptibility to cereal soil-borne mosaic virus.
topic DURUM WHEAT
SOILBORNE CEREAL MOSAIC VIRUS
MYCOFLORA
ITALY
topic_facet DURUM WHEAT
SOILBORNE CEREAL MOSAIC VIRUS
MYCOFLORA
ITALY
url http://hdl.handle.net/11585/64788