Abstract

Dickeya and Pectobacterium spp. both cause blackleg and soft rot of potato, which can be a yield-reducing factor to potato production. The purpose of this study was to examine the interaction between these two bacterial genera causing potato infection, and subsequent disease development and yield responses under field conditions. Analysis of 883 potato samples collected in Northeastern USA using polymerase chain reaction determined that Dickeya dianthicola and P. parmentieri were found in 38.1% and 53.3% of all samples, respectively, and that 20.6% of samples contained both D. dianthicola and P. parmentieri. To further investigate the relationship between the two bacterial species and their interaction, field trials were established. Potato seed pieces of “Russet Burbank”, “Lamoka”, and “Atlantic” were inoculated with bacterial suspension of D. dianthicola at 107 colony-forming unite (CFU)/mL using a vacuum infiltration method, air dried, and then planted in the field. Two-year results showed that there was a high correlation (p < 0.01) between yield loss and percent of inoculated seed pieces. In a secondary field trial conducted in 2018 and 2019, seed pieces of potato “Shepody”, “Lamoka” and “Atlantic” were inoculated with D. dianthicola, P. parmentieri, or mixture of both species, and then planted. In 2019, disease severity index, as measured by the most sensitive variety “Lamoka”, was 16.2 with D. dianthicola inoculation, 10.4 with P. parmentieri, 25.4 with inoculation with both bacteria. Two-year data had a similar trend. Thus, D. dianthicola was more virulent than P. parmentieri, but the co-inoculation of the two species resulted in increased disease severity compared to single-species inoculation with either pathogen.

Highlights

  • Blackleg and soft rot (BSR) of potato (Solanum tuberosum) is caused by many bacterial species in the genera Dickeya and Pectobacterium

  • Frequency and Distribution of Dickeya dianthicola and Pectobacterium parmentieri in Potato samples collected from fields were assayed using polymerase chain reaction (PCR) to detect both Dickeya and Pectobacterium spp

  • There was a trend where the number of samples received which were infected by P. parmentieri increased during subsequent years, but the percentage of total samples infected by D. dianthicola declined through the six years of the study

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Summary

Introduction

Blackleg and soft rot (BSR) of potato (Solanum tuberosum) is caused by many bacterial species in the genera Dickeya and Pectobacterium. Pectobacterium atrosepticum was dominant in Europe before 1970, but Dickeya dianthicola followed by D. solani, have become dominant in some European countries in recent decades [1,2]. One plant may be infected by more than one pathogen [10,11] Such a complex disease structure is determined based on the interactions between pathogen species, host plant, biotic and abiotic environmental factors [10,12,13,14,15]

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