Abstract

Xanthomonas fragariae is the causative agent of angular leaf spot of strawberry, a quarantine organism in plant propagation material in the European Union. Field experiments were conducted to assess the risks for infection of strawberry plants through dispersal of an aerosolized inoculum. In practice, pathogen aerosols can be formed during mowing of an infected crop or by water splashing on symptomatic plants during overhead irrigation or rain. In our experiments, aerosols were generated by spraying suspensions of X. fragariae with a density of 108 cfu ml−1 or water under pressure vertically up into the air. In strawberry plants (cv Elsanta) placed at 1.3, 5 and 10 m distance downwind from the spray boom, infections were found, as evidenced with a combination of dilution–plating and molecular techniques, but more frequently in plants wetted prior to inoculation than in plants kept dry. A logarithmic decrease in infection incidence was found with the distance to the inoculum source. Symptomatic plants were found up to 5 m distance from the inoculum source. No infected plants were found in plants placed 4 m upwind or treated with water. In glasshouse studies, it was shown that under conditions favorable for disease development, spray-inoculation of strawberry plants with estimated densities of X. fragariae as low as 2000 cfu per plant were able to cause symptoms both in cv Elsanta and cv Sonata. Results indicate that there is a considerable risk on infections of strawberry plants exposed to aerosolized inoculum.

Highlights

  • Xanthomonas fragariae (Kennedy and King 1962a; Kennedy and King 1962b), is the causative agent of angular leaf spot of strawberry

  • In 2013, strawberry plants of varieties Elsanta and Sonata were spray-inoculated with suspensions of X. fragariae of either 0, 102, 104, 106 or 108 cfu ml−1

  • X. fragariae released in the form of aerosolized cells can infect strawberry plants, minimally up to a distance of 10 m of the inoculum source

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Summary

Introduction

Xanthomonas fragariae (Kennedy and King 1962a; Kennedy and King 1962b), is the causative agent of angular leaf spot of strawberry. Infections can result in high economic losses as plants should be removed and destroyed upon disease outbreaks (Desmet et al 2006). In the Netherlands, one of the biggest producers of strawberry planting material in Europe (Lieten 2014), legislation is in place about the radius of the buffer zone to be cleared around disease foci. No chemical or biological control agents are currently available to control the disease, but on a small scale, thermotherapy is applied to reduce infection pressure (Turechek and Peres 2009; Van Kruistum et al 2015). All commercial cultivars are susceptible to X. fragariae at a various level (Desmet et al 2009; Turechek and Peres 2009)

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