Effect of Cucurbit Host, Production Region, and Season on the Population Structure of in Florida.

Plant Dis

Department of Plant Pathology, Everglades Research and Education Center, University of Florida, Belle Glade, FL 33430.

Published: February 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • CDM is a major disease affecting cucurbit crops in the United States, particularly in Florida, which produces many cucurbit species and may serve as a source of infection for other regions.
  • Over two years, researchers collected 274 isolates from various cucurbit plants in Florida to analyze genetic diversity and population structure using SSR markers and qPCR assays.
  • The study found distinct clades of isolates based on the type of cucurbit host, which could impact regional disease management strategies, marking an important step in understanding CDM in Florida and similar areas.

Article Abstract

, the causal agent of Cucurbit downy mildew (CDM), is one of the most important diseases affecting cucurbit production in the United States. This disease is especially damaging to Florida production areas, as the state is a top producer of many cucurbit species. In addition, winter production in central and south Florida likely serves as a likely source of inoculum for spring and summer cucurbit production throughout the eastern United States, where CDM is unable to overwinter in the absence of a living host. Over 2 years (2017 and 2018) and four seasons (spring 2017, spring 2018, fall 2017, and fall 2018), 274 isolates were collected from cucurbit hosts at production sites in south, central, and north Florida. The isolates were analyzed with 10 simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers to establish population structure and genetic diversity and further assigned to a clade based on a qPCR assay. Results of population structure and genetic diversity analyses differentiated isolates based on cucurbit host and clade (1 or 2). Of the isolates assigned to clade by qPCR, butternut squash, watermelon, and zucchini were dominated by clade 1 isolates, whereas cucumber isolates were split 34 and 59% between clades 1 and 2, respectively. Clade assignments agreed with isolate clustering observed within discriminant analysis of principal components (DAPC) based on SSR markers, although watermelon isolates formed a group distinct from the other clade 1 isolates. For seasonal collections from cucumber at each location, isolates were typically skewed to one clade or the other and varied across locations and seasons within each year of the study. This variable population structure of cucumber isolates could have consequences for regional disease management. This is the first study to characterize populations in Florida and evaluate the effect of cucurbit host and clade-type on isolate diversity and population structure, with implications for CDM management in Florida and other United States cucurbit production areas.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1094/PDIS-12-22-2939-REDOI Listing

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