Abstract
Summary.A simple method for maintaining and measuring soil water and the relationship between soil water and seed‐borne Fusarium culmorum seedling blight of wheat was investigated under controlled environmental conditions to develop reproducible assay conditions for epidemiological studies and the testing of fungicide seed treatments. For reproducibility, soil matric potential (ψm) was used to define soil water, and a range of watering regimes were tested. Treatments were watered to either a maximum ψm or to maintain a mean ψm in order to establish which parameter best described the effect that soil water had on the incidence of disease symptoms. The severity of disease symptoms was closely related to the mean soil water status and not the maximum ψm value. Watering intervals, ranging from three times a day to once every three days, did not affect this relationship. The percentage of seedlings showing symptoms after emergence (i.e. localised or extensive necrotic lesions) was inversely related to the mean ψm. With increasing soil dryness (mean ψm from ‐0.14 MPa to ‐0.17 MPa) the percentage of seedlings with post‐emergence symptoms decreased from 50% to 20%. However, as the mean ψm changed from ‐0.14 MPa to ‐0.17 MPa the percentage of seedlings dying before emergence increased from 25% to 55% in direct proportion to ψm. Overall the incidence of infection as indicated by the total number of seedlings showing symptoms either before or after emergence remained relatively constant, and was not significantly related to mean ψm.
Published Version
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