Screen house and field resistance of taro cultivars to taro leaf blight disease (Phytophtora colocasiae)

Introduction: Taro leaf blight disease cause by Phytophtora colocasiae has become an economic disease in Cocoyam growing regions of Cameroon. Aims: To screen for resistance 10 improved and 4 local cultivars of taro against taro leaf blight disease. Study Design: A randomized complete block design...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Fokunang, C.N., Mbong, G., Manju, E., Tembe-Fokunang, E.A., Hanna, R.
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: Sciencedomain International 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/77482
_version_ 1855529580381601792
author Fokunang, C.N.
Mbong, G.
Manju, E.
Tembe-Fokunang, E.A.
Hanna, R.
author_browse Fokunang, C.N.
Hanna, R.
Manju, E.
Mbong, G.
Tembe-Fokunang, E.A.
author_facet Fokunang, C.N.
Mbong, G.
Manju, E.
Tembe-Fokunang, E.A.
Hanna, R.
author_sort Fokunang, C.N.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Introduction: Taro leaf blight disease cause by Phytophtora colocasiae has become an economic disease in Cocoyam growing regions of Cameroon. Aims: To screen for resistance 10 improved and 4 local cultivars of taro against taro leaf blight disease. Study Design: A randomized complete block design study. Place of Study: Studies were conducted at the International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA) Yaounde Nkolbisson from July 2013 to January 2014. Methodology: Taro cultivars from tissue culture were planted in the screen house conditions and tested for virulence and pathogenicity with 4 isolates of Phythophthora colocasiae at spore density of 3×104 spores /ml of distilled water. Plants were planted in the field to assess disease incidence and severity. Results: The results obtained on the different taro cultivars, revealed that all the 4 isolates showed variable pathogenicity. They caused lesions on inoculated leaves. There was variability in pathogenicity based on the small lesion lengths produced on cultivars, these included BL/SM132 and Red petiole. Isolate 3 showed a stronger sensitivity to leaf collapse and defoliation irrespective of the cultivar tested. There was a significant difference (p = 0.05) in tissue collapse and leaf defoliation on exposure to the different fungal isolates. The result of field infection rates of P. colocasiae at 126 DAP-154 DAP on 10 improved and 4 local cultivars indicated that there was significant variability (p = 0.05) in incidence and disease severity, with high incidence and severity occurring at 154 DAP in all cultivars. Improved cultivar BL/SM132 showed no classic symptoms of P. colocasiae and therefore it was resistant to Phytophthora colocasiae. Conclusion: The results obtained on virulence and pathogenicity of Phythophthora colocasiae on the different taro cultivars revealed that all the 4 isolates showed variable pathogenicity. They caused lesions, on inoculated leaves. Isolate 3 showed a stronger sensitivity to leaf collapse and defoliation irrespective of the cultivar tested. The result of field infection rates of P. colocasiae at 126 DAP-154 DAP on 10 improved and 4 local cultivars indicated that there was a significant variability (p = 0.05) in disease incidence and severity, with high incidence and severity occurring at 154 DAP in all cultivars. Improved cultivar BL/SM132 showed no classic symptoms of P. colocasiae and therefore it was resistant to Phytophthora colocasiae as compared to all the other cultivars which showed high severity rates of infection of the disease and thus were susceptible to the disease.
format Journal Article
id CGSpace77482
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2016
publishDateRange 2016
publishDateSort 2016
publisher Sciencedomain International
publisherStr Sciencedomain International
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace774822025-11-11T10:33:33Z Screen house and field resistance of taro cultivars to taro leaf blight disease (Phytophtora colocasiae) Fokunang, C.N. Mbong, G. Manju, E. Tembe-Fokunang, E.A. Hanna, R. taro plant diseases cocoyam (taro) pathogenicity cultivars phytophthora colocasia Introduction: Taro leaf blight disease cause by Phytophtora colocasiae has become an economic disease in Cocoyam growing regions of Cameroon. Aims: To screen for resistance 10 improved and 4 local cultivars of taro against taro leaf blight disease. Study Design: A randomized complete block design study. Place of Study: Studies were conducted at the International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA) Yaounde Nkolbisson from July 2013 to January 2014. Methodology: Taro cultivars from tissue culture were planted in the screen house conditions and tested for virulence and pathogenicity with 4 isolates of Phythophthora colocasiae at spore density of 3×104 spores /ml of distilled water. Plants were planted in the field to assess disease incidence and severity. Results: The results obtained on the different taro cultivars, revealed that all the 4 isolates showed variable pathogenicity. They caused lesions on inoculated leaves. There was variability in pathogenicity based on the small lesion lengths produced on cultivars, these included BL/SM132 and Red petiole. Isolate 3 showed a stronger sensitivity to leaf collapse and defoliation irrespective of the cultivar tested. There was a significant difference (p = 0.05) in tissue collapse and leaf defoliation on exposure to the different fungal isolates. The result of field infection rates of P. colocasiae at 126 DAP-154 DAP on 10 improved and 4 local cultivars indicated that there was significant variability (p = 0.05) in incidence and disease severity, with high incidence and severity occurring at 154 DAP in all cultivars. Improved cultivar BL/SM132 showed no classic symptoms of P. colocasiae and therefore it was resistant to Phytophthora colocasiae. Conclusion: The results obtained on virulence and pathogenicity of Phythophthora colocasiae on the different taro cultivars revealed that all the 4 isolates showed variable pathogenicity. They caused lesions, on inoculated leaves. Isolate 3 showed a stronger sensitivity to leaf collapse and defoliation irrespective of the cultivar tested. The result of field infection rates of P. colocasiae at 126 DAP-154 DAP on 10 improved and 4 local cultivars indicated that there was a significant variability (p = 0.05) in disease incidence and severity, with high incidence and severity occurring at 154 DAP in all cultivars. Improved cultivar BL/SM132 showed no classic symptoms of P. colocasiae and therefore it was resistant to Phytophthora colocasiae as compared to all the other cultivars which showed high severity rates of infection of the disease and thus were susceptible to the disease. 2016-07-31 2016-10-31T10:13:34Z 2016-10-31T10:13:34Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/77482 en Open Access application/pdf Sciencedomain International Fokunang, C., Mbong, G., Manju, E., Tembe, E. & Hanna, R, (2016). Screen house and field resistance of taro cultivars to taro leaf blight disease (Phytophtora colocasiae). British Biotechnology Journal, 15(1), 1-15.
spellingShingle taro
plant diseases
cocoyam (taro)
pathogenicity
cultivars
phytophthora
colocasia
Fokunang, C.N.
Mbong, G.
Manju, E.
Tembe-Fokunang, E.A.
Hanna, R.
Screen house and field resistance of taro cultivars to taro leaf blight disease (Phytophtora colocasiae)
title Screen house and field resistance of taro cultivars to taro leaf blight disease (Phytophtora colocasiae)
title_full Screen house and field resistance of taro cultivars to taro leaf blight disease (Phytophtora colocasiae)
title_fullStr Screen house and field resistance of taro cultivars to taro leaf blight disease (Phytophtora colocasiae)
title_full_unstemmed Screen house and field resistance of taro cultivars to taro leaf blight disease (Phytophtora colocasiae)
title_short Screen house and field resistance of taro cultivars to taro leaf blight disease (Phytophtora colocasiae)
title_sort screen house and field resistance of taro cultivars to taro leaf blight disease phytophtora colocasiae
topic taro
plant diseases
cocoyam (taro)
pathogenicity
cultivars
phytophthora
colocasia
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/77482
work_keys_str_mv AT fokunangcn screenhouseandfieldresistanceoftarocultivarstotaroleafblightdiseasephytophtoracolocasiae
AT mbongg screenhouseandfieldresistanceoftarocultivarstotaroleafblightdiseasephytophtoracolocasiae
AT manjue screenhouseandfieldresistanceoftarocultivarstotaroleafblightdiseasephytophtoracolocasiae
AT tembefokunangea screenhouseandfieldresistanceoftarocultivarstotaroleafblightdiseasephytophtoracolocasiae
AT hannar screenhouseandfieldresistanceoftarocultivarstotaroleafblightdiseasephytophtoracolocasiae