Watermelon is an important cucurbit vegetable crop grown in most of the United States. Phytophthora fruit rot of watermelon caused by has been a major factor, limiting production for the past 15 years in the southeastern United States. The U.S. Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service released five Phytophthora fruit rot-resistant germplasm lines for use in breeding programs. These lines were developed by phenotyping using a local isolate of from South Carolina. The present study was undertaken to determine if these resistant lines had broad resistance to diverse isolates collected from different states and crops. Five resistant germplasm lines (USVL020-PFR, USVL203-PFR, USVL782-PFR, USVL489-PFR, and USVL531-MDR) and two susceptible cultivars, Sugar Baby and Mickey Lee, used as checks were grown in a field in 2014 and 2015 to produce fruit for evaluation. Mature fruit were harvested and placed in a walk-in growth chamber and inoculated with 20 different isolates. The chamber was maintained at 26 ± 2°C and high relative humidity (>95%) using a humidifier. All five resistant germplasm lines were significantly more resistant than the two susceptible checks to all 20 isolates. Among the five resistant germplasm lines, USVL020-PFR, USVL782-PFR, and USVL531-MDR had broad resistance. Some isolates induced minor lesions and rot on USVL489-PFR compared with the other resistant lines. Variation in virulence and genetic diversity among the 20 isolates was also observed. The five watermelon germplasm lines will be useful for developing commercial watermelon cultivars with broad resistance to .
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1094/PDIS-11-20-2480-RE | DOI Listing |
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