Potato soil-borne diseases. A review

被引:109
作者
Fiers, Marie [1 ,2 ]
Edel-Hermann, Veronique [1 ]
Chatot, Catherine [2 ]
Le Hingrat, Yves [3 ]
Alabouvette, Claude [1 ]
Steinberg, Christian [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Bourgogne, INRA, UMR Microbiol Sol & Environm 1229, CMSE, F-21065 Dijon, France
[2] Germicopa R&D, F-29520 Kerguivarch, Chateauneuf Du, France
[3] FNPPPT, Bretagne Plants, F-29460 Roudouhir, Hanvec, France
关键词
Cultural practices; Decision support system; Pathogen ecology; Pedologic and climatic factors; Plant microorganism interaction; Soil; Soil suppressiveness; VEGETATIVE COMPATIBILITY GROUPS; MICHIGANENSIS SUBSP-SEPEDONICUS; SCURF HELMINTHOSPORIUM-SOLANI; PLANT-PARASITIC NEMATODES; BACTERIAL RING ROT; PATHOGEN RHIZOCTONIA-SOLANI; FACTORS AFFECTING SURVIVAL; ROSEUM VAR SAMBUCINUM; STUBBY-ROOT NEMATODE; TIME PCR ASSAY;
D O I
10.1007/s13593-011-0035-z
中图分类号
S3 [农学(农艺学)];
学科分类号
0901 ;
摘要
Potato crop is the fourth main food crop in the world and it will certainly feed a big part of the global population in the next years. The economical outlets for this crop are great; however, numerous diseases either soil- or air-borne can cause huge losses in the production. Worldwide, about 40 soil-borne diseases affect potato and cause severe damages especially on tubers, the economically most important part of the plant. The occurrence and development of soil-borne diseases depend on very diverse factors affecting either the pathogen or the plant. Favorable conditions for potato diseases development are frequently the same as the conditions needed for potato growth: temperature between 10A degrees C and 25A degrees C, high humidity, medium pH, etc. Adapted cultural practices such as a rotation longer than 4 years, appropriate fertilization and water management, an adapted delay between haulm killing and harvest, and dry and cool conditions for tuber storage are good ways to control potato diseases. In most cases, potato pathogens develop specific survival forms, dissemination ways and host penetration methods. The genetic variability of the pathogens implies the use of adapted diagnostic and control methods. Decision support systems developed to predict yield losses allow choosing good control methods such as the use of healthy seeds, adapted pesticides, cultural practices, and biological control agents for each potato disease. The complexity of the interactions between a pathogen and its host, influenced by biotic and abiotic factors of the environment, make the control of the diseases often very difficult. However, deep knowledge of pathosystems allows setting up integrated pest management systems allowing the production of healthy and good quality potatoes.
引用
收藏
页码:93 / 132
页数:40
相关论文
共 50 条
[31]   Selective recovery of soil-borne metal contaminants through integrated solubilization by biogenic sulfuric acid and precipitation by biogenic sulfide [J].
Fang, Di ;
Zhang, Ruichang ;
Liu, Xue ;
Zhou, Lixiang .
JOURNAL OF HAZARDOUS MATERIALS, 2012, 219 :119-126
[32]   Phytotoxicity analysis of extracts from compost and their ability to inhibit soil-borne pathogenic fungi and reduce root-knot nematodes [J].
Xu, Dabing ;
Raza, Waseem ;
Yu, Guanghui ;
Zhao, Qingyun ;
Shen, Qirong ;
Huang, Qiwei .
WORLD JOURNAL OF MICROBIOLOGY & BIOTECHNOLOGY, 2012, 28 (03) :1193-1201
[33]   Soil-borne polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in El Paso, Texas: Analysis of a potential problem in the United States/Mexico border region [J].
De La Torre-Roche, Roberto J. ;
Lee, Wen-Yee ;
Campos-Diaz, Sandra I. .
JOURNAL OF HAZARDOUS MATERIALS, 2009, 163 (2-3) :946-958
[34]   Characterizing the Interaction Between Root-knot Nematodes and Soil-borne Fungi which are Pathogenic to Passion Fruit (Passiflora edulis) [J].
Mangeiro, Mariana Z. ;
Nunes, Rafael A. ;
Vieira, Jose O. L., Jr. ;
Mussi-Dias, Vicente ;
Viana, Alexandre P. ;
Souza, Ricardo M. .
JOURNAL OF NEMATOLOGY, 2022, 54 (01)
[35]   Integrated Soil Health Management for Plant Health and One Health: Lessons From Histories of Soil-borne Disease Management in California Strawberries and Arthropod Pest Management [J].
Muramoto, Joji ;
Parr, Damian Michael ;
Perez, Jan ;
Wong, Darryl G. .
FRONTIERS IN SUSTAINABLE FOOD SYSTEMS, 2022, 6
[36]   Soil-borne disease suppressiveness after short and long term application of fermented, composted or fresh organic amendment treatments in arable soils [J].
van der Sloot, Maartje ;
Maerowitz-Mcmahan, Solomon ;
Postma, Joeke ;
Limpens, Juul ;
De Deyn, Gerlinde B. .
APPLIED SOIL ECOLOGY, 2024, 195
[37]   Mangrove Soil-Borne Trace Elements in Qi'ao Island: Implications for Understanding Terrestrial Input of Trace Elements into Part of the Pearl River Estuary [J].
Niu, Anyi ;
Ma, Jiaojiao ;
Gao, Yifei ;
Xu, Songjun ;
Lin, Chuxia .
APPLIED SCIENCES-BASEL, 2020, 10 (07)
[38]   Endophytic Fungi as Potential Bio-Control Agents of Soil-Borne Pathogen (Mar, 10.1007/s10343-024-00975-z, 2024) [J].
Muhammad, Murad ;
Basit, Abdul ;
Ali, Kashif ;
Li, Wen-Jun ;
Li, Li ;
Mohamed, Heba I. .
JOURNAL OF CROP HEALTH, 2024, 76 (03) :637-637
[39]   Emerging Tick-Borne Diseases [J].
Madison-Antenucci, Susan ;
Kramer, Laura D. ;
Gebhardt, Linda L. ;
Kauffman, Elizabeth .
CLINICAL MICROBIOLOGY REVIEWS, 2020, 33 (02)
[40]   How anthropogenic changes may affect soil-borne parasite diversity? Plant-parasitic nematode communities associated with olive trees in Morocco as a case study [J].
Ali, Nadine ;
Tavoillot, Johannes ;
Besnard, Guillaume ;
Khadari, Bouchaib ;
Dmowska, Ewa ;
Winiszewska, Grazyna ;
Fossati-Gaschignard, Odile ;
Ater, Mohammed ;
Hamza, Mohamed Ait ;
El Mousadik, Abdelhamid ;
El Oualkadi, Aicha ;
Moukhli, Abdelmajid ;
Essalouh, Laila ;
El Bakkali, Ahmed ;
Chapuis, Elodie ;
Mateille, Thierry .
BMC ECOLOGY, 2017, 17