Abstract

SummaryBoth moulds and bluestain fungi cause serious economic losses and much research is aimed at finding environmentally and economically acceptable methods of control. Despite this, there has been little study of the growth of these fungi in freshly cut wood unaltered by drying or sterilization and which therefore resembles the substratum normally invaded under natural field conditions. Thus, the growth of six sapstain fungi was compared at 20°C in freshly cut pine billets and on three types of artificial media (MEA, TWA and Pine Sapwood agar). The fungi comprised Ceratocystis coerulescens, Leptographium wingfieldii, Ophiostoma minus, Ophiostoma piceae, Phacidium coniferarum and Sphaeropsis sapinea. The six species varied markedly in their linear growth rate on agar media. In pine billets, they extended at different rates in longitudinal, radial and tangential directions, showing different pathogenic ability and patterns of colonization. Some species appeared to be ‘xylem preferring’ while others colonized the phloem tissue more readily. The growth of C. coerulescens in pine billets was very rapid (19.4 mm/day) and on average was more than twice as fast as on MEA, suggesting it was strongly stimulated by living pine tissue. The fungi also tended to grow more slowly in logs cut between autumn and spring compared with those harvested in mid‐ to late summer.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call