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Large-Scale Surveys of Blackleg of Oilseed Rape (Leptosphaeria biglobosa) Revealed New Insights into Epidemics of This Disease in China.

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Blackleg of oilseed rape caused by Leptosphaeria maculans/L. biglobosa is a worldwide important disease, L. maculans is more virulent than L. biglobosa, thus, it causes a great concern for oilseed… Click to show full abstract

Blackleg of oilseed rape caused by Leptosphaeria maculans/L. biglobosa is a worldwide important disease, L. maculans is more virulent than L. biglobosa, thus, it causes a great concern for oilseed rape production. In China, blackleg (L. biglobosa) of oilseed rape was reported in 2000s, however, epidemiological features of blackleg have not been well elucidated. Moreover, whether L. maculans exists in China is still an open question. Therefore, a five-year survey was done in China to collect blackleg-occurrence data for characterizing the features of blackleg epidemics, and to identify the blackleg pathogens for assessing the risk of L. maculans invasion. The results showed that all the 19 surveyed provinces had blackleg on oilseed rape and the most frequently-occurring provinces are Gansu, Qinghai, Shaanxi and Hubei. Phoma stem canker was the most common symptom, which was associated with stem cracks on winter oilseed rape and with stem-weevil activities on spring oilseed rape. Temperature and rainfall were the main factors for blackleg epidemics on winter oilseed rape, whereas rainfall was the main factor for blackleg epidemics on spring oilseed rape. Brassica campestris and B. juncea oilseed rapes were more susceptible than B. napus to blackleg. Oilseed rapes cultivated under the continuous dry land-cropping pattern were more prone to blackleg than those cultivated under the paddy land/dry land-cropping pattern. All 6,015 fungal isolates from blackleg plant tissues belonged to L. biglobosa. These results are helpful for understanding of the blackleg epidemics of oilseed rapes and for management of this disease in China.

Keywords: rape; oilseed rape; blackleg oilseed; biglobosa; blackleg epidemics

Journal Title: Plant disease
Year Published: 2022

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