Abstract

The rice blast fungus Pyricularia oryzae mainly overwinters in infested rice organs stored indoors, whereas it is difficult or impossible for the pathogen to overwinter outdoors. By contrast, blast pathogens infecting weed grasses must overwinter outdoors every winter to continue their life cycle. In this study, we investigated the overwintering location of P. oryzae infecting wild, green, and giant foxtails to identify the mechanism that enables them to overwinter. Recovery of P. oryzae was tested in seeds of wild foxtail collected from the soil surface from December to April over three winters. No P. oryzae was recovered from the seed samples of any wild foxtail collected at the ends of the three experimental periods in April. Recovery was also tested from blast lesions on leaves and seeds sampled from withered green foxtail in the experimental field of Saga University from November to April during two winters. In contrast to seeds on the soil surface, P. oryzae survived in lesions and seeds at the ends of the two experimental periods during April, suggesting that withered host plants could be the overwintering site of the pathogen. Rice plants are reaped and removed from paddy fields after harvesting. Thus, withered, standing plants may be available solely to blast pathogens infecting wild grasses, possibly explaining the higher winter survival frequency of weed pathogens than that of rice blast pathogens outdoors.

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