Can the timely removal of outer symptomatic leaves of enset plants following a tool-mediated infection with Xanthomonas vasicola pv. musacearum lead to recovery?

Xanthomonas wilt (XW) of enset is a major biotic constraint to enset cultivation in Ethiopia. Three enset cultivars, namely, ‘Mazia’ (tolerant), ‘Arkiya’ (susceptible) and ‘Kelisa’ (susceptible) were inoculated with Xanthomonas vasicola pv. musacearum (Xvm), the causal agent of XW at Hosanna (2,177...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Said, A., Blomme, Guy, Ocimati, Walter, Muzemil, S.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: International Society for Horticultural Science 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/110357
_version_ 1855515272451981312
author Said, A.
Blomme, Guy
Ocimati, Walter
Muzemil, S.
author_browse Blomme, Guy
Muzemil, S.
Ocimati, Walter
Said, A.
author_facet Said, A.
Blomme, Guy
Ocimati, Walter
Muzemil, S.
author_sort Said, A.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Xanthomonas wilt (XW) of enset is a major biotic constraint to enset cultivation in Ethiopia. Three enset cultivars, namely, ‘Mazia’ (tolerant), ‘Arkiya’ (susceptible) and ‘Kelisa’ (susceptible) were inoculated with Xanthomonas vasicola pv. musacearum (Xvm), the causal agent of XW at Hosanna (2,177 m a.s.l.) in Southern Ethiopia. The treatments included inoculation of one or three outer leaves, and subsequent removal or non-removal of symptomatic leaves and leaf sheaths. This study explored the potential effect of singly removing symptomatic outer enset leaves on the recovery of enset plants from XW disease. Removal of symptomatic outer leaves was postulated to remove a large percentage of inoculum from a plant, thus preventing further symptom development on more inner/adjacent/younger leaves, eventually leading to the recovery of infected enset plants. The ‘Mazia’ enset cultivar was tolerant as it recovered fully irrespective of the number of leaves inoculated and whether single symptomatic leaves were removed or not. Singly removing symptomatic leaves in this tolerant enset cultivar however significantly hastened the recovery of the plants by approximately two months. This practice could thus be promoted for hastening the recovery of tolerant enset cultivars. For the susceptible cultivars ‘Arkiya’ and ‘Kelisa’, leaf removal only improved recovery when single leaves were inoculated. However, infection levels still remained high by the close of the experiment, suggesting that the practice may not be suitable in the susceptible cultivars. This study was conducted on young enset plants; cutting symptomatic leaves on susceptible but more mature plants could be explored. For the tolerant cultivars, the practice needs validation through studies on a wider range of cultivars.
format Journal Article
id CGSpace110357
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2020
publishDateRange 2020
publishDateSort 2020
publisher International Society for Horticultural Science
publisherStr International Society for Horticultural Science
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1103572025-11-11T17:41:19Z Can the timely removal of outer symptomatic leaves of enset plants following a tool-mediated infection with Xanthomonas vasicola pv. musacearum lead to recovery? Said, A. Blomme, Guy Ocimati, Walter Muzemil, S. xanthomonas disease control cultivars ensete musaceae Xanthomonas wilt (XW) of enset is a major biotic constraint to enset cultivation in Ethiopia. Three enset cultivars, namely, ‘Mazia’ (tolerant), ‘Arkiya’ (susceptible) and ‘Kelisa’ (susceptible) were inoculated with Xanthomonas vasicola pv. musacearum (Xvm), the causal agent of XW at Hosanna (2,177 m a.s.l.) in Southern Ethiopia. The treatments included inoculation of one or three outer leaves, and subsequent removal or non-removal of symptomatic leaves and leaf sheaths. This study explored the potential effect of singly removing symptomatic outer enset leaves on the recovery of enset plants from XW disease. Removal of symptomatic outer leaves was postulated to remove a large percentage of inoculum from a plant, thus preventing further symptom development on more inner/adjacent/younger leaves, eventually leading to the recovery of infected enset plants. The ‘Mazia’ enset cultivar was tolerant as it recovered fully irrespective of the number of leaves inoculated and whether single symptomatic leaves were removed or not. Singly removing symptomatic leaves in this tolerant enset cultivar however significantly hastened the recovery of the plants by approximately two months. This practice could thus be promoted for hastening the recovery of tolerant enset cultivars. For the susceptible cultivars ‘Arkiya’ and ‘Kelisa’, leaf removal only improved recovery when single leaves were inoculated. However, infection levels still remained high by the close of the experiment, suggesting that the practice may not be suitable in the susceptible cultivars. This study was conducted on young enset plants; cutting symptomatic leaves on susceptible but more mature plants could be explored. For the tolerant cultivars, the practice needs validation through studies on a wider range of cultivars. 2020-11-18 2020-11-30T14:36:31Z 2020-11-30T14:36:31Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/110357 en Open Access application/pdf International Society for Horticultural Science Said, A.; Blomme, G.; Ocimati, W.; Muzemil, S.; Yemataw, Z. (2020) Can the timely removal of outer symptomatic leaves of enset plants following a tool-mediated infection with Xanthomonas vasicola pv. musacearum lead to recovery? Fruits 75(6) p. 258–266. ISSN: 0248-1294
spellingShingle xanthomonas
disease control
cultivars
ensete
musaceae
Said, A.
Blomme, Guy
Ocimati, Walter
Muzemil, S.
Can the timely removal of outer symptomatic leaves of enset plants following a tool-mediated infection with Xanthomonas vasicola pv. musacearum lead to recovery?
title Can the timely removal of outer symptomatic leaves of enset plants following a tool-mediated infection with Xanthomonas vasicola pv. musacearum lead to recovery?
title_full Can the timely removal of outer symptomatic leaves of enset plants following a tool-mediated infection with Xanthomonas vasicola pv. musacearum lead to recovery?
title_fullStr Can the timely removal of outer symptomatic leaves of enset plants following a tool-mediated infection with Xanthomonas vasicola pv. musacearum lead to recovery?
title_full_unstemmed Can the timely removal of outer symptomatic leaves of enset plants following a tool-mediated infection with Xanthomonas vasicola pv. musacearum lead to recovery?
title_short Can the timely removal of outer symptomatic leaves of enset plants following a tool-mediated infection with Xanthomonas vasicola pv. musacearum lead to recovery?
title_sort can the timely removal of outer symptomatic leaves of enset plants following a tool mediated infection with xanthomonas vasicola pv musacearum lead to recovery
topic xanthomonas
disease control
cultivars
ensete
musaceae
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/110357
work_keys_str_mv AT saida canthetimelyremovalofoutersymptomaticleavesofensetplantsfollowingatoolmediatedinfectionwithxanthomonasvasicolapvmusacearumleadtorecovery
AT blommeguy canthetimelyremovalofoutersymptomaticleavesofensetplantsfollowingatoolmediatedinfectionwithxanthomonasvasicolapvmusacearumleadtorecovery
AT ocimatiwalter canthetimelyremovalofoutersymptomaticleavesofensetplantsfollowingatoolmediatedinfectionwithxanthomonasvasicolapvmusacearumleadtorecovery
AT muzemils canthetimelyremovalofoutersymptomaticleavesofensetplantsfollowingatoolmediatedinfectionwithxanthomonasvasicolapvmusacearumleadtorecovery