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dc.coverage.spatialE. E. Tropical Pichilinguees_ES
dc.creatorVera Coello, Danilo Isaac-
dc.date.accessioned2019-05-13T21:03:05Z-
dc.date.available2019-05-13T21:03:05Z-
dc.date.issued2015-05-
dc.identifier.other*EC-INIAP-BEETP-MCP. Mocache (T/V473d)-
dc.identifier.urihttp://repositorio.iniap.gob.ec/handle/41000/5311-
dc.description.abstractEyespot is a chronic disease of winter wheat, caused by Oculimacula yallundae (OY) and O. acuformis (OA) that results in premature ripening of grain, lodging, and reduced grain yield. Discovery of the Oculimacula spp. teleomorph in the Pacific Northwest region of the United States (PNW) is relatively recent and the role of apothecia or ascospores in the epidemiology of eyespot is unclear. Our goals were to determine the occurrence of OY and OA apothecia in commercial and inoculated field plots, to investigate when apothecia are produced and ascospores released, to determine persistence of apothecia to over summer and over winter, and to investigate factors influencing production of OY apothecia in vitro. Apothecia of OY and OA were found in spring and fall in commercial wheat fields, demonstrating that sexual reproduction occurs regularly in the PNW and may play a role as primary inoculum in the eyespot disease cycle. Apothecia survived over summer but not over winter in inoculated field plots. Occurrence of ascospores was monitored with Burkard spore traps in inoculated field plots. Ascospores of OY and OA were trapped during spring and fall, and there were no differences in the number of ascospores trapped from fields with a wheat crop or stubble. Number of ascospores m-3 wk-1 was positively correlated with relative humidity and weekly accumulated precipitation. Regression models based on environmental variables accounted for 27 to 36% of the variation in number of ascospores trapped. The effect of media, host substrate, inoculation method, temperature, light and stress-shock preconditions on development of primordial and mature apothecia of OY were studied. Inoculation of winter wheat and spring barley straw segments with a suspension of conidia or mycelial plugs favored apothecia development; however, mature apothecia did not developed in treatments without host substrate. This research provides a base-line offering new insights into the role of the sexual stage of Oculimacula spp. in the epidemiology of eyespot. Understanding the incidence, seasonality and occurrence of apothecia and ascospores provides a better understanding of the role of ascospores as an inoculum source.es_ES
dc.format.extent4 p.es_ES
dc.language.isoenes_ES
dc.publisherWashington, USA: Washington State University, Department of Plant Pathology, 2015. 141 p.es_ES
dc.subjectEPIDEMIOLOGÍAes_ES
dc.subjectWHEATes_ES
dc.subjectSTAGEes_ES
dc.subjectEYESPOTes_ES
dc.titleROLE OF THE ASCIGEROUS STATE IN THE EPIDEMIOLOGY OF EYESPOT IN WHEATes_ES
dc.typeTesises_ES
dcterms.bibliographicCitationVera Coello, D.I. (2015). ROLE OF THE ASCIGEROUS STATE IN THE EPIDEMIOLOGY OF EYESPOT IN WHEAT. (Tesis Doctoral). Washington State University Department of Plant Pathology, Estados Unidos de América.es_ES
dc.subject.academicPH.D. THESISes_ES
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