The effects of storage duration, temperature and cultivar on the severity of garlic clove rot caused by Fusarium proliferatum

Diseases that affect garlic during storage can lead to severe economic losses for farmers worldwide. One causal agent of clove rot is Fusarium proliferatum. Here, the progress of clove rot caused by F. proliferatum and its dependence on different storage conditions and cultivar type were studied. The effect of temperature on mycelial growth, conidial viability, and fungal survival during garlic commercial storage was documented. Samples of 50 bulbs from a randomized field trial with three different clonal generations for purple garlic (F3, F4 and F5) and the F4 clonal generation for white garlic were labeled and stored for two months (short-term storage). In addition, another sample of the F5 clonal generation of purple garlic was stored for 6 months after harvest (long-term storage). The presence of the pathogen and the percentage of symptomatic cloves were evaluated. A notable difference in the rot severity index (RSI) of different garlic varieties was observed. In all studied cases, clove rot increased with storage time at 20 °C, and the white garlic variety had a higher index of rot severity after two months of storage. Additionally, there were clear differences between the growth rates of F. proliferatum isolates. Studies conducted on the temperature responses of the pathogen propagules showed that exposure for at least 20. min at 50 °C was highly effective in significantly reducing the viability of fungal conidia. Pathogenicity studies showed that the fungus is pathogenic in all commercial varieties. However, there were significant differences in varietal susceptibility between Chinese and white garlic type cultivars (81.84 ± 16.44% and 87.5 ± 23.19% symptomatic cloves, respectively) and purple cultivars (49.06 ± 13.42% symptomatic cloves). © 2012 Elsevier B.V.

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Main Authors: Palmero Llamas, D., Gálvez Patón, L., García Díaz, M., Gil Serna, J., Benito Sáez, S.
Format: journal article biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2013
Subjects:Conidial viability, Mycelial growth, Control methods,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12792/3305
http://hdl.handle.net/10261/294301
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spelling dig-inia-es-10261-2943012023-02-20T10:37:22Z The effects of storage duration, temperature and cultivar on the severity of garlic clove rot caused by Fusarium proliferatum Palmero Llamas, D. Gálvez Patón, L. García Díaz, M. Gil Serna, J. Benito Sáez, S. Conidial viability Mycelial growth Control methods Diseases that affect garlic during storage can lead to severe economic losses for farmers worldwide. One causal agent of clove rot is Fusarium proliferatum. Here, the progress of clove rot caused by F. proliferatum and its dependence on different storage conditions and cultivar type were studied. The effect of temperature on mycelial growth, conidial viability, and fungal survival during garlic commercial storage was documented. Samples of 50 bulbs from a randomized field trial with three different clonal generations for purple garlic (F3, F4 and F5) and the F4 clonal generation for white garlic were labeled and stored for two months (short-term storage). In addition, another sample of the F5 clonal generation of purple garlic was stored for 6 months after harvest (long-term storage). The presence of the pathogen and the percentage of symptomatic cloves were evaluated. A notable difference in the rot severity index (RSI) of different garlic varieties was observed. In all studied cases, clove rot increased with storage time at 20 °C, and the white garlic variety had a higher index of rot severity after two months of storage. Additionally, there were clear differences between the growth rates of F. proliferatum isolates. Studies conducted on the temperature responses of the pathogen propagules showed that exposure for at least 20. min at 50 °C was highly effective in significantly reducing the viability of fungal conidia. Pathogenicity studies showed that the fungus is pathogenic in all commercial varieties. However, there were significant differences in varietal susceptibility between Chinese and white garlic type cultivars (81.84 ± 16.44% and 87.5 ± 23.19% symptomatic cloves, respectively) and purple cultivars (49.06 ± 13.42% symptomatic cloves). © 2012 Elsevier B.V. 2023-02-20T10:37:22Z 2023-02-20T10:37:22Z 2013 journal article Postharvest Biology and Technology 78: 34-39 (2013) 0925-5214 http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12792/3305 http://hdl.handle.net/10261/294301 10.1016/j.postharvbio.2012.12.003 en none Elsevier
institution INIA ES
collection DSpace
country España
countrycode ES
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-inia-es
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Sur
libraryname Biblioteca del INIA España
language English
topic Conidial viability
Mycelial growth
Control methods
Conidial viability
Mycelial growth
Control methods
spellingShingle Conidial viability
Mycelial growth
Control methods
Conidial viability
Mycelial growth
Control methods
Palmero Llamas, D.
Gálvez Patón, L.
García Díaz, M.
Gil Serna, J.
Benito Sáez, S.
The effects of storage duration, temperature and cultivar on the severity of garlic clove rot caused by Fusarium proliferatum
description Diseases that affect garlic during storage can lead to severe economic losses for farmers worldwide. One causal agent of clove rot is Fusarium proliferatum. Here, the progress of clove rot caused by F. proliferatum and its dependence on different storage conditions and cultivar type were studied. The effect of temperature on mycelial growth, conidial viability, and fungal survival during garlic commercial storage was documented. Samples of 50 bulbs from a randomized field trial with three different clonal generations for purple garlic (F3, F4 and F5) and the F4 clonal generation for white garlic were labeled and stored for two months (short-term storage). In addition, another sample of the F5 clonal generation of purple garlic was stored for 6 months after harvest (long-term storage). The presence of the pathogen and the percentage of symptomatic cloves were evaluated. A notable difference in the rot severity index (RSI) of different garlic varieties was observed. In all studied cases, clove rot increased with storage time at 20 °C, and the white garlic variety had a higher index of rot severity after two months of storage. Additionally, there were clear differences between the growth rates of F. proliferatum isolates. Studies conducted on the temperature responses of the pathogen propagules showed that exposure for at least 20. min at 50 °C was highly effective in significantly reducing the viability of fungal conidia. Pathogenicity studies showed that the fungus is pathogenic in all commercial varieties. However, there were significant differences in varietal susceptibility between Chinese and white garlic type cultivars (81.84 ± 16.44% and 87.5 ± 23.19% symptomatic cloves, respectively) and purple cultivars (49.06 ± 13.42% symptomatic cloves). © 2012 Elsevier B.V.
format journal article
topic_facet Conidial viability
Mycelial growth
Control methods
author Palmero Llamas, D.
Gálvez Patón, L.
García Díaz, M.
Gil Serna, J.
Benito Sáez, S.
author_facet Palmero Llamas, D.
Gálvez Patón, L.
García Díaz, M.
Gil Serna, J.
Benito Sáez, S.
author_sort Palmero Llamas, D.
title The effects of storage duration, temperature and cultivar on the severity of garlic clove rot caused by Fusarium proliferatum
title_short The effects of storage duration, temperature and cultivar on the severity of garlic clove rot caused by Fusarium proliferatum
title_full The effects of storage duration, temperature and cultivar on the severity of garlic clove rot caused by Fusarium proliferatum
title_fullStr The effects of storage duration, temperature and cultivar on the severity of garlic clove rot caused by Fusarium proliferatum
title_full_unstemmed The effects of storage duration, temperature and cultivar on the severity of garlic clove rot caused by Fusarium proliferatum
title_sort effects of storage duration, temperature and cultivar on the severity of garlic clove rot caused by fusarium proliferatum
publisher Elsevier
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12792/3305
http://hdl.handle.net/10261/294301
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