Effects of water stress on the development of banana xanthomonas wilt disease

Water quantity and distribution plays a significant role in determining the productivity of crops and the outcome of many host–pathogen interactions in natural plant populations. In the present study, tissue culture plants of the East African highland banana cultivar Mbwazirume were established in a...

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Autores principales: Ochola, D., Ocimati, W., Tinzaara, William, Blomme, Guy, Karamura, E.B.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Wiley 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/66052
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author Ochola, D.
Ocimati, W.
Tinzaara, William
Blomme, Guy
Karamura, E.B.
author_browse Blomme, Guy
Karamura, E.B.
Ochola, D.
Ocimati, W.
Tinzaara, William
author_facet Ochola, D.
Ocimati, W.
Tinzaara, William
Blomme, Guy
Karamura, E.B.
author_sort Ochola, D.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Water quantity and distribution plays a significant role in determining the productivity of crops and the outcome of many host–pathogen interactions in natural plant populations. In the present study, tissue culture plants of the East African highland banana cultivar Mbwazirume were established in a screenhouse to mimic drought conditions in the field and so investigate the effects of water stress on the development of banana xanthomonas wilt (BXW) caused by the bacterium Xanthomonas campestris pv. musacearum (Xcm). In the absence of host resistance, all inoculated banana plants succumbed to Xcm infection and symptoms were expressed, on average, 14 days post‐inoculation (dpi). Water stress effects were significant (P < 0·05) for disease incubation period, and significant (P < 0·001) for incidence and severity. Data revealed that BXW development is hastened by the combined effect of water stress before and after inoculation compared to when plants are stressed only before inoculation or maintained stress‐free (SF). A twofold increase in evaluated disease parameters suggests that both timing of infection and duration of exposure to water stress are important in determining the shortened resident phase of Xcm to multiply and rapidly spread in the vascular tissues of the banana. This study has shown that water‐stressed banana plants are physiologically weak and hence more vulnerable to Xcm infections. This may be of relevance to the effect of future climate change on banana production.
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spelling CGSpace660522024-08-27T06:52:57Z Effects of water stress on the development of banana xanthomonas wilt disease Ochola, D. Ocimati, W. Tinzaara, William Blomme, Guy Karamura, E.B. bananas musaceae stress water xanthomonas campestris horticulture genetics Water quantity and distribution plays a significant role in determining the productivity of crops and the outcome of many host–pathogen interactions in natural plant populations. In the present study, tissue culture plants of the East African highland banana cultivar Mbwazirume were established in a screenhouse to mimic drought conditions in the field and so investigate the effects of water stress on the development of banana xanthomonas wilt (BXW) caused by the bacterium Xanthomonas campestris pv. musacearum (Xcm). In the absence of host resistance, all inoculated banana plants succumbed to Xcm infection and symptoms were expressed, on average, 14 days post‐inoculation (dpi). Water stress effects were significant (P < 0·05) for disease incubation period, and significant (P < 0·001) for incidence and severity. Data revealed that BXW development is hastened by the combined effect of water stress before and after inoculation compared to when plants are stressed only before inoculation or maintained stress‐free (SF). A twofold increase in evaluated disease parameters suggests that both timing of infection and duration of exposure to water stress are important in determining the shortened resident phase of Xcm to multiply and rapidly spread in the vascular tissues of the banana. This study has shown that water‐stressed banana plants are physiologically weak and hence more vulnerable to Xcm infections. This may be of relevance to the effect of future climate change on banana production. 2015-06 2015-05-13T13:59:53Z 2015-05-13T13:59:53Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/66052 en Limited Access Wiley Ochola, D.; Ocimati, W.; Tinzaara, W.; Blomme, G.; Karamura, E. B. (2015) Effects of water stress on the development of banana xanthomonas wilt disease-Plant Pathology 64(3) p. 552-558. ISSN: 0032-0862
spellingShingle bananas
musaceae
stress
water
xanthomonas campestris
horticulture
genetics
Ochola, D.
Ocimati, W.
Tinzaara, William
Blomme, Guy
Karamura, E.B.
Effects of water stress on the development of banana xanthomonas wilt disease
title Effects of water stress on the development of banana xanthomonas wilt disease
title_full Effects of water stress on the development of banana xanthomonas wilt disease
title_fullStr Effects of water stress on the development of banana xanthomonas wilt disease
title_full_unstemmed Effects of water stress on the development of banana xanthomonas wilt disease
title_short Effects of water stress on the development of banana xanthomonas wilt disease
title_sort effects of water stress on the development of banana xanthomonas wilt disease
topic bananas
musaceae
stress
water
xanthomonas campestris
horticulture
genetics
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/66052
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