VIEW ARTICLE
Research Reaction of Tall Fescue Infected and Noninfected by Acremonium
coenophialum to Puccinia graminis subsp. graminicola. R.
E. Welty, R. E. Barker, and M. D. Azevedo, Agricultural Research Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture,
National Forage Seed Production Research Center, Corvallis, OR 97331-7102. Plant Dis. 75:883-886. Accepted for publication 15 March 1991. This
article is in the public domain and not copyrightable. It may be freely
reprinted with customary crediting of the source. The American Phytopathological
Society, 1991. DOI: 10.1094/PD-75-0883. Seedlings of the tall fescue cultivar Kentucky 31 infected or not infected by
the endophyte Acremonium coenophialum were evaluated for reaction to
Puccinia graminis subsp. graminicola in the greenhouse. Seedlings (11
wk old) were rated for rust infection type (0–4 scale) 2 wk after inoculation
with urediniospores. Seedlings rated 0 or 1 were considered resistant and those
rated >1, susceptible; 27% of the infected and 19% of the noninfected seedlings
were resistant. In a second experiment, 14 seedlings (10 wk old) each of 20 tall
fescue cultivars were inoculated and rated; 12 were infected by endophyte and
eight were not. Among the infected cultivars, 7% of the seedlings were rated
infection type 0, 2% type 1, 7% type 2, 21% type 3, and 63% type 4. Among the
noninfected cultivars, 7% of the seedlings were rated infection type 0, 1% type
1, 4% type 2, 17% type 3, and 71% type 4. Based on these observations, the
presence of A. coenophialum in seedlings did not influence infection type
of P. g. graminicola. |