How do current ratings of sugarcane varieties for resistance to smut relate to natural infection
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Date
2018
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Publisher
ASSCT
Abstract
SUGARCANE SMUT, CAUSED by a fungus Sporisorium scitamineum, is an important
disease of sugarcane in Australia. Sugarcane smut can be managed effectively through
the propagation of resistant varieties. In Sugar Research Australia’s (SRA) smut
screening experiments, stalks of varieties from various stages of breeding programs are
cut into one-eye setts and then dipped into a smut spore suspension (5 × 106 spores/mL
water) for 10 min at 31 °C. After germination, the plants are transplanted to the field
and disease incidence is measured in the plant crop and first and second ratoon crops.
This method is effective for screening of a large number of varieties in a relatively short
period (10–12 months) and is used in other countries. Although this method is widely
accepted, it has some drawbacks: i) test plants are subject to very high disease pressure;
and ii) it does not replicate natural infection. Three experiments were established in
2007, 2008 and 2009, to determine if the ratings obtained by artificial inoculation
technique predict field resistance of varieties. All experiments were planted with 10 or 5
replicates of the test varieties planted between rows of infected Q205A, and maintained
until second ratoon. Highly susceptible varieties Q205A and Q157 had >40% infected
plants in plant crops whereas little smut was observed in intermediate and resistant
varieties. Average % of smut infected plants increased in all experiments from the plant
crop (5–12%) to first ratoon (21–46%) and second ratoon (26–59%) crops. The
correlation coefficient values between smut incidence in the natural infection
experiments and the historical ratings obtained using dip-inoculation methods ranged
from r = 0.82 to 0.72, indicating a good agreement between natural infection trials and
dip inoculation ratings.