Abstract

Some Pythium spp. cause damping off and root rot in soybeans and other crop species. One of the most effective management tools to reduce disease is host resistance; however, little is known about resistance in soybean to Pythium spp. The soybean nested associated mapping (SoyNAM) parent lines are a set of germplasms that were crossed to a single hub parent to create recombinant inbred line populations for the purpose of mapping agronomic traits. The SoyNAM parents were screened for resistance to Pythium lutarium, Pythium oopapillum, Pythium sylvaticum, and Pythium torulosum in separate assays to evaluate seed and root rot severity. Of the 40 SoyNAM parents, only 'Maverick' was resistant to the four species tested; however, 13 were resistant to three species. Other lines were resistant to two, one, or none of the species tested. Correlations between seed and root rot severity for the lines assessed were weak or insignificant. Results indicate that mechanisms of resistance to seed and root rot caused by Pythium spp. may not necessarily be the same.

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