Effect of carpropamid on secondary infection by rice blast fungus
✍ Scribed by Kurahashi, Yoshio; Sakawa, Shinji; Sakuma, Haruhiko; Tanaka, Keiko; Haenssler, Gerd; Yamaguchi, Isamu
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1999
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 144 KB
- Volume
- 55
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1526-498X
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Carpropamid
KTU 3616) provides good control of leaf and panicle blast by 'one-(WIN}, shot' nursery-box treatment. It inhibits melanin biosynthesis in appressorial cells of Pyricularia oryzae, making them hyaline. Penetration by infection hyphae from the hyaline appressoria into rice epidermal cells is substantially hindered. In addition, the spread of rice blast spores from primary lesions to the other parts of the plant leading to secondary infection is largely prevented when the plants are treated with carpropamid by spray or water surface application. Secondary infection was simulated in a glass chamber ütted with an ultrasonic humidiüer. On treated plants, many blast spores formed in the lesions, but the number of air spora that were dispersed from the lesions decreased signiücantly. A similar suppression of the spore liberation was observed in vitro when lesions on rice leaf segments, or discs from Pyricularia cultures on oatmeal agar were treated with the chemical. Spores from treated lesions or from the cultures on oatmeal agar amended with the chemical germinated normally and produced well-melanized appressoria on cellophane membranes. In addition, the spores proved to be fully pathogenic towards rice seedlings, producing normal disease symptoms. These results strongly suggest that carpropamid reduces the secondary infection of rice by Pyricularia by speciücally hindering spore liberation.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES