Authors
Jan Dirk van Elsas, Pieter Kastelein, Petra van Bekkum, Jean M van der Wolf, Philippine M de Vries, Leo S van Overbeek
Publication date
2000/12
Journal
Phytopathology
Volume
90
Issue
12
Pages
1358-1366
Publisher
The American Phytopathological Society
Description
After outbreaks of potato brown rot in three different fields in the Netherlands, the fate of the brown rot pathogen, Ralstonia solanacearum biovar 2, was monitored in soil by immunofluorescence colony staining (IFC) supported by R. solanacearum division-2 specific polymerase chain reaction. In selected areas of all fields, the R. solanacearum population densities were initially on the order 104 to 106 per g of topsoil. These population densities then declined progressively over time. In two fields, however, the pathogen persisted for periods of 10 to 12 months. The survival of a selected R. solanacearum biovar 2 isolate, strain 1609, in three soils, a loamy sand and two different silt loam soils, was further studied in soil microcosm experiments. The effects of temperature and soil moisture content were assessed. At 12 or 15 and 20°C, a gradual decline of the population densities was observed in all three soils, from the …
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