Dutta Bhabesh, Anderson Faith, Smith Samuel, Gitaitis Ronald D
Department of Plant Pathology, University of Georgia, Coastal Plain Experiment Station, Tifton 31793-0748.
Plant Dis. 2017 Apr;101(4):613-618. doi: 10.1094/PDIS-10-16-1411-RE. Epub 2017 Feb 10.
Pantoea ananatis, the causal organism of center rot of onion (Allium cepa L.), can survive on different weeds but, in a previous survey, it was most commonly found on Florida pusley (Richardia scabra L.). The epiphytic survival of P. ananatis on R. scabra under different temperature and moisture regimes was investigated. Weed seedlings were spray inoculated with rifampicin-resistant strain PNA 97-1 at either 10 or 10 CFU/ml and incubated in a growth chamber at 15.5 or 21.1°C at 65% relative humidity for 96 h postinoculation (hpi), which represented the mean environmental conditions during mid-March to mid-May in Vidalia, GA when onion production and R. scabra presence overlap. For plants inoculated with P. ananatis at 10 CFU/ml, the bacterium survived for 96 hpi when incubated at 21.1°C, with mean populations of 1.7 × 10 CFU/g of leaf tissue. In contrast, no viable bacteria were detected after 72 hpi at 15.5°C. For plants inoculated with P. ananatis at 10 CFU/ml, the bacterium survived for 96 hpi at 21.1°C (3.8 × 10 CFU/g) whereas, during the sample time period, viable bacterial populations were not detected at 15.5°C. Survival of P. ananatis on R. scabra was also monitored during alternating 12 h wet and 12 h dry periods, or continuous wet or dry periods for 96 hpi at 15.5 or 21.1°C. Compared with initial or continuous dry periods, P. ananatis survived significantly better with a 12 h wet/12 h dry cycle or a continuous 96 hpi wet period at both 15.5 and 21.1°C. Unlike at 15.5°C, P. ananatis populations (7.4 × 10 CFU/g) survived for 96 hpi at 21.1°C under a cycle of 12 h dry and 12 h wet. These results demonstrate that P. ananatis can survive on R. scabra leaves under conditions of 21.1°C and prolonged leaf wetness and may potentially serve as a source of inoculum to onion.