• Title/Summary/Keyword: Fuasrium oxysporum

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Comparison of Susceptibility of Asparagus (Asparagus officinalis L.) Plantlets and Seedlings to Different Fusarium Speices (아스파라거스(Asparagus officinalis L.) 유묘와 기내배양 식물체의 Fusarium species에 대한 감수성 비교)

  • 이윤수
    • Korean Journal Plant Pathology
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    • v.10 no.2
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    • pp.140-143
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    • 1994
  • Comparison of susceptibility of asparagus (Asparagus officinalis L.) seedlings and plantlets to different fusarial species was made to determine whether in vitro propagated asparagus plantlets can be used as a substitute for seedlings in histopathological study on the infection processes of Fusarium species to asparagus. Fusarium oxysporum was isolated most frequently (50% of the total) from lesions of root and crown rot of asparagus cultivated in the field followed by F. moniliforme (8.8% of the total) and F. solani (2.9% of the total). Plantlets and seedlings of all asparagus were susceptible to f. moniliforme and F. oxysporum isolates, but those were not susceptible to both avirulent F. oxysporum (AVFO) and F. solani in pathogenicity tests. Overall, there were no differences between seedlings and plantlets in the susceptibility to virulent fusarial infections. In vitro propagated asparagus plantlets, therefore, could be used as a substitute for seedlings in histopathological study on the infection processes of Fuasrium species to asparagus.

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First Report of Fusarium oxysporum Causing Damping-off on Paprika in Korea (Fusarium oxysporum에 의한 파프리카 잘록병)

  • Park, Mi-Jeong;Back, Chang-Gi;Seo, Yunhee;Park, Jong-Han
    • Research in Plant Disease
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    • v.25 no.2
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    • pp.94-97
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    • 2019
  • In February 2019, a damping-off disease occurred at the seedling stage of paprika in a commercial nursery located in Cheorwon, Korea. A species of Fusarium was isolated from the diseased plant and it was identified as Fusarium oxysporum based on morphological characteristics and nucleotide sequence data of translation elongation factor $1-{\alpha}$ and the largest subunit of RNA polymerase. The isolate obtained was revealed to be pathogenic to the host plant through pathogenicity tests, and the reisolation of the pathogen confirmed Koch's postulates. This is the first report of damping-off caused by Fusarium oxysporum on paprika in Korea.