Effects of lettuce cultivar mixtures, differing for resistance genes, on Bremia lactucae incidence - Archive ouverte HAL Accéder directement au contenu
Communication Dans Un Congrès Année : 2012

Effects of lettuce cultivar mixtures, differing for resistance genes, on Bremia lactucae incidence

Résumé

Bremia lactucae, the causal agent of lettucedowny mildew,is still an important problem in lettuce production in spite of many resistance genes used over the last 50 years in Europe. Every new gene introduced into commercial varieties has been overcome in a few years. At INRA, new resistance genes were found in two L. virosa accessions and introgressed into butterhead lettuce (lines named Vi). These resistance genes are not yet introduced in commercial varieties; we would like propose a using strategy of these genes that could increase their durability. Which strategies might be efficient to reduce the evolution of the pathogen and ensure a durable resistance with these genes? A lower selection pressure on B. factucae population could reduce the speed of breakdown of the new resistance. A possibility to have a lower selection pressure on the B. factucae populations could be mixture of two cultivars differing for resistance genes. Therefore Bremia contamination has been studied for several winters in cultures of these resistant Vi lines mixed with a susceptible cultivar. ln the same culture, the progression of Bremia on the susceptible plants has been observed. The disease development has been studied after an artificial contamination with two objectives: (i) does the pathogen overcome the resistance, (ii) is the disease seve rit y on the susceptible cultivar acceptable for commercial use? After eight experimentations under a polythene greenhouse, pure stands were compared to mixture in ratio 1:3 (susceptible:resistant) after focal inoculation with a B. factucae isolate common in the region. No sporulation has been observed on the two Vi lines issued from L. virosa. For the vear with high inoculum pressure, the cultivar mixture did not reduce the disease seve rit y on the susceptible cultivar (for example, in winter 2006-2007, 24 contaminated leaves per susceptible plant in pure stand and in mixture; a disease seve rit y of 53 and 48 on the susceptible variety, respectively in pure stand and in mixture). For intermediate to low inoculum pressure, the disease development was slower on the susceptible cultivar grown in mixtures, with less contaminated plants and less contaminated leaves per plant (1.1 in pure stand vs 0.2 in mixture, in winter 2005-2006) at harvest. The disease severity on susceptible cultivar is lower in mixture than in pure stand for example in winter 2005-2006 (index 1.3 vs 9.5); this seve rit y was similar at the beginning of the epidemics for both treatments, but it became much higher in pure susceptible stand on the last week before harvest. Therefore the mixed culture could be an interesting method to reduce disease level on a cultivar susceptible to the strain that is important in the culture and also possibly increase the durability of new resistance by a lower selection pressure on the virulent strains. Nevertheless this cultural practice must be adapted to the needs of growers economically and technically; it could be difficult to have an efficient design of the mixture in a commercial culture. Some other experiments must be done in connection with the growers and the breeders.
Fichier non déposé

Dates et versions

hal-01190836 , version 1 (01-09-2015)

Identifiants

  • HAL Id : hal-01190836 , version 1
  • PRODINRA : 216483

Citer

Brigitte Maisonneuve, Eric Martin, Loic Jean, Claude C. Pope de Vallavieille, Michel Pitrat. Effects of lettuce cultivar mixtures, differing for resistance genes, on Bremia lactucae incidence. Plant resistance sustainability 2012. International conference, Oct 2012, La Colle sur Loup, France. ⟨hal-01190836⟩
117 Consultations
0 Téléchargements

Partager

Gmail Facebook X LinkedIn More