Plant Pathogens and Biocontrol Agents - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 76
About This Presentation
Title:

Plant Pathogens and Biocontrol Agents

Description:

Canker - localized necrosis resulting in lesion, usually on stem ... to atmospheric conditions that favor sporulation at the source, survival during ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:6812
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 77
Provided by: estelle7
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Plant Pathogens and Biocontrol Agents


1
Plant Pathogens and Biocontrol Agents
2
Plant Pests
  • Pathogens
  • Predators
  • Weeds

3
Symptoms of Microbial Diseases in Plants
  • Necrosis - death of plant cells may appear as
    spots in localized areas
  • Canker - localized necrosis resulting in lesion,
    usually on stem
  • Wilt - droopiness due to loss of turgor
  • Blight - Loss of foliage
  • Chlorosis - loss of photosynthetic capability due
    to bleaching of chlorophyll
  • Hypoplasia - stunted growth
  • Hyperplasia - excessive growth
  • Gall - tumor

4
Anton de Bary
  • German botanist
  • Investigate Irish potato blight in 1861
  • Proved experimentally that Phytophthora infestans
    was actually the cause of the disease

5
Birth of Plant Pathology
  • de Bary gave birth to the science of plant
    pathology
  • Soon other plant pathogenic fungi were described
  • Pathogenic bacteria and viruses were identified
    later in the 19th century

6
Dispersal of Pathogens
  • Necessary for repeated cycles of infection and
    multiplication and, therefore, the spread of an
    epidemic
  • Understanding of dispersal phase is necessary for
    predicting the onset and severity of disease
  • Within the realm of dispersal are the processes
    of release, transport, and deposition
  • Pathogens are dispersed by wind, rain, soil
    water, insects, nematodes and humans

7
Scope of Dispersal
  • Spread of plant disease can proceed over short
    distances through focal spread as well as over
    long distances
  • Terminology of disease spread
  • Microscale
  • Mesoscale
  • Synoptic scale (macroscale

8
An infection focus
  • Area of a crop with a contagious disease
  • Foci often circular
  • If strongly affected by wind, may be comet-shaped
    or v-shaped
  • generally have a constant radial expansion
  • a few cm per day for a localized infection
  • hundreds of km per year for a pandemic

9
Dispersal Mechanisms
  • Airborne Dispersal
  • Passive discharge
  • Active discharge
  • Rain splash

10
Long Distance Transport
  • Explains the introduction of a pathogen to a new
    area
  • Also explains the yearly reintroduction to areas
    where overwintering cannot occur
  • Most of the well studied examples of long
    distance transport involve fungal spores
  • Due to environmental hazards only a small percent
    of spores are able to survive long range
    transport

11
Boundary layer
  • Before spores reach the free air above the crop,
    they must pass through the boundary layer
    surrounding the crop
  • Possibly as much as 90 of the spores are
    deposited within the crop itself
  • The percent that escape from the canopy depends
    on the balance between deposition and turbulence
    with greater escape during more turbulent winds
  • Position in canopy also important

12
Pathogens Viruses
  • Transmission of viruses
  • Insect vectors - especially aphids, whiteflies,
    leafhoppers, mealybugs, ants
  • Nematodes
  • Seeds from infected parent plants
  • Airborne transmission
  • Infected plant parts
  • Aphids
  • Pollen

13
Pathogens Bacteria
  • Generally Gram-negative bacilli species of
    Erwinia, Pseudomonas, Xanthomonas, Agrobacterium,
    and Corynebacterium
  • Dispersal from plant generally passive by water,
    wind-blown water, animals, agricultural workers
  • In warm, humid climates, where dew and rain are
    common, dispersal of bacteria by rain-splash is
    the major means of disease spread
  • Airborne spread on rafts of plant material

14
Pathogens Fungi
  • Over 70 of all major crop diseases are caused by
    fungi
  • Thousands of fungal species recognized as plant
    pathogens
  • Fungal diseases cost more than 3.5 billion to US
    farmers alone
  • In general spores of most fungal pathogens are
    adapted for airborne transport

15
Late blight of potato (and tomato)
  • Caused by oomycete Phytophthora infestans
  • Occurs wherever potatoes are grown
  • All potato cultivars are susceptible
  • Without fungicidal protection, a blighted field
    can be destroyed within a couple of days

16
(No Transcript)
17
Cool, wet weather promotes disease spread
  • Method of germination is dependent on
    meteorological conditions
  • Cool, wet weather promotes zoospores
  • Warmer, drier conditions promote germination of
    the sporangium itself

18
(No Transcript)
19
Potato late blight forecasting
  • 40 year history in many potato growing regions
  • When meteorological conditions indicate that
    Phytophthora spread is likely to occur warnings
    are issued to apply fungicides
  • Forecasting models have been successful in
    reducing the number of fungicide applications.

20
Long distance dispersal ofPhytophthora infestans
  • Intercontinental migration has been associated
    with the transport of infected plants or tubers
    by humans
  • This occurred in the 1840s and again before the
    1980 outbreak of the A2 mating type
  • Long distance dispersal over tens of kilometers
    is attributed to wind-blown sporangia
  • Maps showing the rapid progress of blight
    epidemics in the 1840s suggest that a
    Second-Order Epidemic of late blight could
    possibly occur during a single growing season.

21
(No Transcript)
22
(No Transcript)
23
Tobacco Blue mold
  • Caused by oomycete Peronospora tabacina
  • Unpredictable disease of both wild and cultivated
    tobacco causing devastation some years and not
    appearing at all during other years

24
Blue mold
  • First described in Australia during 19th century
  • In North America the disease was confined to
    seedbeds until 1979
  • 1979 the first serious epidemic occurred

25
North American Epidemics
  • The infection rate was especially severe in both
    1979 and 1980
  • Second-Order Epidemic advancing at rates of 10-32
    km/day northward in the eastern United States to
    southern Canada
  • Crop losses in the U.S. and Canada during these
    two years were estimated at approximately 350
    million

26
Source areas
  • Both host plants and pathogen exist year-round in
    tropical areas such as the Mediterranean and
    Caribbean basins.
  • In temperate regions, tobacco is grown as an
    annual
  • P. tabacina is not able to overwinter in
    temperate zones
  • As a result, the long distance transport of
    inocula from tropical regions

27
(No Transcript)
28
Disease Cycle
  • Infection can occur within four hours after a
    sporangium lands on the leaf
  • Symptom-free incubation period 5-7 days
  • Appearance of yellow lesions and the development
    of new sporangia

29
Conditions for Dispersal
  • Cool, wet, overcast weather, favors the rapid
    advance of the fungus
  • Clear, hot, dry weather stops disease spread

30
Dispersal
  • Each spring in U.S. weather conditions are
    favorable for the northward transport of
    Peronospora sporangia from southern sources
  • Case studies of epidemics occurring from 1979 to
    1986 suggest at least two likely pathways of
    disease spread
  • Northward from Florida and Georgia, Cuba
  • North and Eastward from south Texas and Mexico
  • Forecasting systems can potentially provide time
    for tobacco farmers to apply fungicides

31
Forecasting Blue Mold
  • Predictive models make use of extant disease
    outbreaks, weather fronts, and weather forecasts
  • HY-SPLIT trajectory model successfully used since
    the spring and summer of 1995 to predict
    outbreaks of blue mold
  • The model used to plot trajectories of
    inoculum-laden parcels of air

32
The Daily Blue Mold Forecast
  • Forecast produced by HY-SPLIT describes future
    weather conditions at the source and along the
    anticipated pathway
  • Emphasis given to atmospheric conditions that
    favor sporulation at the source, survival during
    transport, and deposition
  • Overall outlook describes the likelihood of blue
    mold spread over the next 48 hours
  • Available on-line at www.ces.ncsu.edu/depts/pp/bl
    uemold/

33
Rust Fungi
  • About 6000 species
  • Attack a wide range of host
  • Cause some of the most destructive plant diseases
  • Basidiomycetes but no fruiting body

34
Coffee Rust
  • Destroyed coffee plantation in Ceylon in 1870s
    and 1880s
  • Today threatens coffee wherever it is grown
  • 1966 outbreak in Angola produced spores that were
    carried across the Atlantic Ocean and washed out
    by rain in Brazil 5 to 7 days later

35
Wheat rust fungi
  • Stem rust (black rust) caused by Puccinia
    graminis f.sp. tritici
  • Leaf rust (brown rust) caused by Puccinia
    triticina (syn. P. recondita f.sp. tritici)
  • Stripe rust (yellow rust) caused by Puccinia
    striiformis.

36
Puccinia graminis f.sp. tritici
  • Globally the most serious rust pathogen
  • Complex life cycle with 5 spore stages
  • Major method of disease spread is by the
    uredospores which are easily carried by wind for
    hundreds or thousands of kilometers

37
Puccinia graminis Life Cycle
38
(No Transcript)
39
Wheat stems showing uredia (lesions) with
uredospores
40
Uredium with uredospores
41
Telial Stage
42
Source Strength and Viability
  • Mature uredium produces 10,000 uredospores/day
    over several weeks
  • A 5 disease severity would produce 50 uredia
    so 500,000 uredospores/day
  • Field of wheat with moderate infection 4 x 1012
    uredospores/day/hectare
  • Nagarajan and Singh reported that spores had to
    be deposited within 120 hrs after takeoff to be
    infectious

43
Survival of Spores
  • Eversmeyer and Kramer studied survival of
    uredospores in field
  • At subfreezing temperatures during winter no
    spores viable after 96 hrs
  • During spring 10 to 20 viable after 120 hrs 1
    survived for 456 hrs
  • In growth chamber spores viable for up to 864 hrs
    at temp between 10 and 30 C
  • Although atmosphere conditions harsh, small
    percent will survive

44
US Source Areas
  • In south Texas and Mexico uredospore stage can
    survive all winter on winter wheat
  • Gives rise to spring infection
  • Spores carried north by southerly winds to
    northern states where spring wheat grown
  • In late summer and fall uredospores can be
    carried back to southern areas
  • Puccinia Pathway studied since 1920s Stakman
    first described the aerial dispersal

45
Puccinia Pathway
Cereal Disease Laboratory, USDA-ARS, Univ Minn,
St. Paul
46
  • In some years the pathogen is spread gradually by
    anticyclones making a succession of short jumps
    with stops along the way where the inoculum
    multiples
  • (Stakman and Harrar, 1957 Isard and Gage,
    2001)

47
  • In other years uredospores are transported by
    extratropical cyclones over a distance of 1000 km
    or more in 1 or 2 days
  • In early June 1925 a huge spore cloud move 1,000
    km northward
  • Spores were caught in traps throughout the area
    (previously rust-free)
  • Field observations indicated that infection
    throughout the region was almost simultaneous
  • (Stakman and Harrar, 1957 Isard and Gage,
    2001)

48
LDT of wheat rust in Europe
  • Two pathways studied
  • An east European path originating in Turkey and
    Romania
  • A western path from Morocco and Spain
  • Both paths converge in Scandinavian countries

Nagarajan and Singh. 1990. Annual Review of
Phytopathology 28 139-153
49
Brown and Hovmoller. 2002. Aerial dispersal of
pathogens on the global and continental scales
and its impact on plant disease. Science, 297
537-541
50
Other Areas
  • LDT of uredospores between eastern and western
    wheat growing areas of Australia
  • Overseas LDT also studied - two strain in
    Australia identical to strains found in Africa in
    terms of pathogenicity and isozyme patterns
  • LDT of uredospores in India
  • LDT of uredospores of P. striiformis in China

51
Brown and Hovmoller. 2002. Aerial dispersal of
pathogens on the global and continental scales
and its impact on plant disease. Science, 297
537-541
52
Brown and Hovmoller. 2002. Aerial dispersal of
pathogens on the global and continental scales
and its impact on plant disease. Science, 297
537-541
53
Asian Soybean Rust
  • Caused by Phakopsora pachyrhizi
  • Most destructive foliar pathogen on soybean and
    reports of loss range from 10 to 80.
  • Yield losses over 50 are common when
    meteorological conditions favor disease
    development

54
Disease effects
  • The fungus causes numerous uredial lesions on the
    leaves
  • Reduces photosynthetic capacity of the host and
    subsequently reduces the yield of soybeans
  • Simple life cycle with uredospores and
    teliospores on same host
  • Phakopsora pachyrhizi can infect more than 95
    species of plants including other edible legumes
    and also weeds as kudzu

55
(No Transcript)
56
(No Transcript)
57
(No Transcript)
58
Phakopsora pachyrhizi history
  • First described in Japan in 1902
  • By the mid-1930s the pathogen reported from
    several other countries in Asia and in Australia
  • India in the early 1950s.
  • By late 1990s pathogen had spread to several
    countries in Africa
  • 2001 reported from Paraguay and Brazil
  • Over the next few years, the pathogen spread
    through much of the soybean growing areas of
    South America causing significant yield losses
  • First detected in the continental United States
    in November 2004

59
(No Transcript)
60
(No Transcript)
61
(No Transcript)
62
(No Transcript)
63
Plant Pests and Their Control by Fungi and
Bacteria
64
Plant Pathogenic Nematodes
  • Obligate parasites
  • Feed on roots of plants - may cause malformations
  • Many have a sharp stylet that pierces plant cells
  • Some never live in soil, they survive in host and
    are spread by insect vectors
  • Reduces crop yield and increases risk of
    infection through wounds

65
Insects
  • Our greatest competitors for food
  • Damage or destroy crops before and after harvest
  • Larval stage often most destructive
  • Injury plants directly by using plant for food or
    shelter and indirectly by spreading pathogens

66
Basic feeding patterns
  • Chewing Insects
  • Either larvae or adults
  • Tear or bite portions of the plants
  • May eat their way through the plant causing holes
    and tunnels
  • Lvs left as skeletons by some
  • Others eat whole plant
  • Sucking Insects
  • Pierce the plant and sucks up the sap
  • Results in curling, stunting, deformed parts

67
Weeds
  • Unloved plant
  • Injurious to agricultural crops
  • Loss is a direct result of competition for light,
    water, nutrients
  • Unchecked can dominate crop plants
  • Indirectly damages by harboring insect pests
  • Crop losses by weeds in US 14 billion

68
Control Measures
  • We are dependent on healthy plants to feed the
    worlds population
  • Chemicals widely used to control plant pests and
    diseases
  • Dangers of pesticide use apparent
  • Economic cost of pesticides may actually outweigh
    the value of the crop at harvest time
  • Use other techniques to reduce pesticide use

69
Integrated Pest Management (IPM)
  • Multifaceted approach to disease control
  • Sanitation
  • Crop rotation
  • Genetic resistance
  • Biological Control

70
Biological Control
  • Use of living organisms to reduce disease due to
    competition or antagonism
  • i.e.. ladybugs to control aphids
  • Ultimate aim is to reduce dependence on chemicals
  • Today emphasis on microorganisms
  • Bacillus thuringiensis for insect control
  • Several Pseudomonas species for control of
    bacterial and fungal pathogens
  • Numerous fungi for insects, nematodes, fungal
    pathogens

71
Bacillus thuringiensis
  • Common soil bacterium well known for its ability
    to produce crystalline proteins with insecticidal
    properties
  • Since 1960s Bt available as a safe naturally
    occurring biopesticide
  • sold as a dried inoculum containing endospores
    and crystals of insecticidal proteins
  • used as sprays or dusts for a wide variety of
    insects - especially Lepidopteran

72
Bt Toxins
  • Genes for insecticidal proteins on plasmids
  • Many subspecies of Bt which differ in number and
    type of plasmids
  • Over 1000 strains of Bt have been isolated
  • family of toxins
  • over 200 insecticidal proteins identified and
    sequenced

73
Bt Toxins
  • Toxins activated by enzymes in insect gut
  • Kill insects by binding to membranes in digestive
    system and creating pores in membranecontents
    leak into body cavity
  • Harmless to humans, natural enemies of
    arthropods, and non-target organisms

74
Bacillus thuringiensis
  • B.t. subspecies kurstaki is widely used in
    caterpillar control in agriculture and forestry
  • B.t. subspecies israelensis is active against
    mosquitoes and black flies
  • B.t. subspecies tenebrionis is active again
    beetle larvae

75
Bt Uses
  • Spray Applications
  • Bt toxins degrade within a few days
  • Endospores can survive for several years after
    spray applications
  • Genetic Engineering with Bt genes
  • Transfer into crop plants
  • Transfer other bacteria

76
Pseudomonas species
  • Pseudomonas fluorescens for control of fire
    blight (also may control apple blue mold)
  • Fire blight bacterial disease of apples and
    pears caused by Erwinia amylovora
  • Pseudomonas out competes Erwinia on stigma
    surface
  • Reduces use of streptomycin which has been
    helpful since many Erwinia strains resistant
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com