Reactions of selected bean accessions to infection by Macrophomina phaseolina

Fifty-three bean (Phaseolus vulgaris) accessions were evaluated for their reactions to infection by Macrophomina phaseolina under field and greenhouse conditions. A field nursery was established on an experimental farm near Santander de Quilichao, Colombia. All accessions were evaluated in paired ro...

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Autores principales: Pastor Corrales, Marcial A., Abawi, G.S.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Scientific Societies 1988
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/44008
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author Pastor Corrales, Marcial A.
Abawi, G.S.
author_browse Abawi, G.S.
Pastor Corrales, Marcial A.
author_facet Pastor Corrales, Marcial A.
Abawi, G.S.
author_sort Pastor Corrales, Marcial A.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Fifty-three bean (Phaseolus vulgaris) accessions were evaluated for their reactions to infection by Macrophomina phaseolina under field and greenhouse conditions. A field nursery was established on an experimental farm near Santander de Quilichao, Colombia. All accessions were evaluated in paired rows, with and without inoculation, arranged in a randomized block design with three replicates. Field inoculations were made by placing 4 g of whole rice seeds colonized by M. phaseolina per 2-m row on top of the bean seeds in the open furrow. The accessions that showed resistant and intermediate reactions to M. phaseolina and appropriate controls totaling 36 entries were reevaluated in a similar nursery on the same farm. The materials included in the second nursery plus other accessions for a total of 49 also were evaluated in the greenhouse. Bean seeds were covered with 150 ml (layer 2 3 cm) of pasteurized soil infested with dried sclerotia of M. phaseolina (2 g/kg soil). Results of the field evaluation were similar to those obtained from the greenhouse. Twenty-two and 15 accessions were classified as resistant (disease severity rating [DSR] = 1 3) and intermediate (DSR = 3.1 6.0), respectively, following the CIAT evaluation scale of 1 (no visible symptoms) to 9 (plants dead). Among the highly resistant accessions were A 300, BAT 85, BAT 332, BAT 477, BAT 1385, BAT 1651, IPA 1, San Cristobal 83, EMP 86, and G 5059 (H6 Mulatinho). A 70, A 464, A 294, Rio Tibagi, and ICA Pijao were among the most susceptible to M. phaseolina. Based on these data, an international bean nursery consisting of 40 accessions was established and is available for evaluation against M. phaseolina in different bean production areas.
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spelling CGSpace440082024-04-25T06:00:21Z Reactions of selected bean accessions to infection by Macrophomina phaseolina Pastor Corrales, Marcial A. Abawi, G.S. phaseolus vulgaris cultivars resistance macrophomina phaseoli germplasm diseases and pathogens mycoses pests variedades resistencia germoplasma Fifty-three bean (Phaseolus vulgaris) accessions were evaluated for their reactions to infection by Macrophomina phaseolina under field and greenhouse conditions. A field nursery was established on an experimental farm near Santander de Quilichao, Colombia. All accessions were evaluated in paired rows, with and without inoculation, arranged in a randomized block design with three replicates. Field inoculations were made by placing 4 g of whole rice seeds colonized by M. phaseolina per 2-m row on top of the bean seeds in the open furrow. The accessions that showed resistant and intermediate reactions to M. phaseolina and appropriate controls totaling 36 entries were reevaluated in a similar nursery on the same farm. The materials included in the second nursery plus other accessions for a total of 49 also were evaluated in the greenhouse. Bean seeds were covered with 150 ml (layer 2 3 cm) of pasteurized soil infested with dried sclerotia of M. phaseolina (2 g/kg soil). Results of the field evaluation were similar to those obtained from the greenhouse. Twenty-two and 15 accessions were classified as resistant (disease severity rating [DSR] = 1 3) and intermediate (DSR = 3.1 6.0), respectively, following the CIAT evaluation scale of 1 (no visible symptoms) to 9 (plants dead). Among the highly resistant accessions were A 300, BAT 85, BAT 332, BAT 477, BAT 1385, BAT 1651, IPA 1, San Cristobal 83, EMP 86, and G 5059 (H6 Mulatinho). A 70, A 464, A 294, Rio Tibagi, and ICA Pijao were among the most susceptible to M. phaseolina. Based on these data, an international bean nursery consisting of 40 accessions was established and is available for evaluation against M. phaseolina in different bean production areas. 1988 2014-10-02T08:33:05Z 2014-10-02T08:33:05Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/44008 en Scientific Societies
spellingShingle phaseolus vulgaris
cultivars
resistance
macrophomina phaseoli
germplasm
diseases and pathogens
mycoses
pests
variedades
resistencia
germoplasma
Pastor Corrales, Marcial A.
Abawi, G.S.
Reactions of selected bean accessions to infection by Macrophomina phaseolina
title Reactions of selected bean accessions to infection by Macrophomina phaseolina
title_full Reactions of selected bean accessions to infection by Macrophomina phaseolina
title_fullStr Reactions of selected bean accessions to infection by Macrophomina phaseolina
title_full_unstemmed Reactions of selected bean accessions to infection by Macrophomina phaseolina
title_short Reactions of selected bean accessions to infection by Macrophomina phaseolina
title_sort reactions of selected bean accessions to infection by macrophomina phaseolina
topic phaseolus vulgaris
cultivars
resistance
macrophomina phaseoli
germplasm
diseases and pathogens
mycoses
pests
variedades
resistencia
germoplasma
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/44008
work_keys_str_mv AT pastorcorralesmarciala reactionsofselectedbeanaccessionstoinfectionbymacrophominaphaseolina
AT abawigs reactionsofselectedbeanaccessionstoinfectionbymacrophominaphaseolina