Incidence, Distribution, and Pathogenicity of Fungi Growing on Sugar Beet Roots on Top of Outdoor Piles in Idaho.

Plant Dis

USDA ARS, Northwest Irrigation and Soils Research Laboratory, 3793 North 3600 East, Kimberly, Idaho, United States, 83341;

Published: January 2025

Sugar beet roots in Idaho are held under ambient conditions in outdoor storage piles which can lead to fungal growth and rot and substantial sucrose loss. Thus the incidence, distribution, and pathogenicity of fungi associated with fungal growth on the surface of sugar beet roots on top of outdoor piles was investigated. The surface fungal growth on sugar beet roots held on top of 14 Idaho outdoor piles [tarped ventilated (TV) piles and piles with no tarps or ventilation (NTV) at 7 locations] was assessed in 2018-19 and 2019-20. spp. were the only fungi covering more than 1% of the root surface (2 to 48%) on top of NTV piles both years with the most frequently isolated species being , n, and both years. On TV piles spp. (13 to 60%) were also dominant, but spp. (0 to 35%), an -like basidiomycete (0 to 2%), and (0 to 2%) were also frequently present. In the plug assay to test pathogenicity, caused the most rot (P < 0.0001; averaged 31 to 32 mm of rot) followed by spp. ( 14-22 mm, 14-16 mm, and 10 mm). Although spp. caused little or no rot (0 to 2 mm), workers should be cautious on or around sugar beet piles since a number of the spp. are established to be associated with human clinical samples.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1094/PDIS-12-24-2663-REDOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

sugar beet
20
beet roots
16
outdoor piles
12
fungal growth
12
piles
9
incidence distribution
8
distribution pathogenicity
8
pathogenicity fungi
8
roots top
8
top outdoor
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!