AI Article Synopsis

  • Powdery mildew fungi spread through conidia produced on conidiophores, and understanding this dispersal is crucial for disease prevention.
  • A study collected conidia from a single strawberry powdery mildew colony using an electrostatic spore collector to analyze how many conidia were released over time.
  • The findings revealed that the colony released an average of 6.7 × 10^6 conidia in about 816 hours, with light intensity and day length significantly impacting conidial release patterns throughout the year.

Article Abstract

Powdery mildew fungi produce progeny conidia on conidiophores, and promote the spread of powdery mildew diseases by dispersal of the conidia from conidiophores in the natural environment. To gain insights and devise strategies for preventing the spread of powdery mildew infection, it is important to clarify the ecological mechanism of conidial dispersal from conidiophores. In this study, all of the progeny conidia released from single colonies of strawberry powdery mildew fungus ( (Wallroth) U. Braun and S. Takamatsu var. KSP-7N) on true leaves of living strawberry plants ( × Duchesne ex Rozier cv. Sagahonoka) were consecutively collected over the lifetime of the colony with an electrostatic rotational spore collector (insulator drum) under greenhouse conditions, and counted under a high-fidelity digital microscope. The insulator drum consisted of a round plastic container, copper film, thin and transparent collector film, electrostatic voltage generator, and timer mechanism. When negative charge was supplied from the voltage generator to the copper film, the collector film created an attractive force to trap conidia. The electrostatically activated collector film successfully attracted progeny conidia released from the colony. Experiment was carried out at just one colony on one leaf for each month (in February, May, July, October, November, and December in 2021), respectively. Each collector film was exchanged for a new collector film at 24 h intervals until KSP-7N ceased to release progeny conidia from single colonies. Collection experiments were carried out to estimate the total number of conidia released from a single KSP-7N colony over a 35-45-day period after inoculation. During the fungal lifetime, KSP-7N released an average of 6.7 × 10 conidia from each of the single colonies at approximately 816 h. In addition, conidial release from KSP-7N colonies was largely affected by the light intensity and day length throughout a year; the number of conidia released from single KSP-7N colonies in night-time was clearly smaller than that in daytime, and the time of conidial release from single KSP-7N colonies was shorter by approximately 2 to 4 h in autumn and winter than in spring and summer. The ecological characteristics related to conidial releases from KSP-7N colonies will be helpful information for us to successfully suppress the spread of strawberry powdery mildews onto host plants under greenhouse conditions.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9785730PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/plants11243453DOI Listing

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