Plant diseases may survive and be spread by infected seeds. In this study we monitored the longevity of 14 seed-borne pathogens in 9 crop species commonly grown in the Nordic countries, in addition to a sample of sclerotia of . The data from the first 30 years of a 100-year seed storage experiment located in a natural -3.5 °C environment (permafrost) in Svalbard, Norway, are presented. To date, the pathogens, tested by traditional seed health testing methods (freezing blotter, agar plates, growing on tests), have survived. Linear regression analyses showed that the seed infection percentages of in meadow fescue, in timothy, and in wheat were significantly reduced compared to the percentages at the start of the experiment (from 63% to 34%, from 70% to 65%, and from 15% to 1%, respectively), and that in beet had increased significantly (from 43% to 56%). No trends in the infection percentage were observed over the years in spp. in barley (fluctuating between 30% and 64%) or in in cabbage (fluctuating between 82% and 99%), nor in pathogens with low seed infection percentages at the start of the experiment. A major part of the stored sclerotia was viable after 30 years. To avoid the spread of seed-borne diseases, it is recommended that gene banks implement routines that avoid the use of infected seeds.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8539852PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms9102175DOI Listing

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