Abstract

Botrytis cinerea infects waxflower (Chamelaucium spp.) flowers and can induce them to abscise from their petioles before disease becomes evident. Botrytis cinerea infection of flowers was studied on two waxflower cultivars by light and electron microscopy. Pot‐grown waxflower flowers were harvested, inoculated with aqueous suspensions of B. cinerea conidia, incubated at 20–22°C and >95% RH and examined within 96 h post‐inoculation (hpi). Conidial germination on petals started 4 hpi, penetration via germ tube tips was 6 hpi and protoappressoria were formed 8 hpi. Germination on petals approximately doubled every 4–6 h to 18 hpi. Conidial germination was ca. 50% at 22–24 hpi. Botrytis cinerea infected most waxflower flower organs, including petals, anthers and filaments, stigma and hypanthium, within 24 hpi. Hyaline and lobate appressoria were observed 36 hpi. Infection cushions on stamen bases were formed 36 hpi by saprophytic hyphae that originated from anthers. This infection process can give rise to tan‐coloured symptoms typical of botrytis disease that radiate from this part of the flower. Subcuticular hyphae were present at high density near stamen bases and evidently resulted from multiple penetrations from single infection cushions. The subcuticular hyphae grew within the hypanthium and towards the centre of the floral tube. When flower abscission occurred, floral tube tissues close to the abscission zone remained uninfected. This observation infers possible transmission of a signal (e.g. ethylene) upon B. cinerea infection. Thus, B. cinerea causes flower abscission apparently as a defence response.

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