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Could Fusarium Head Blight become an
even more serious problem?
Story made available courtesy of Top Crop Manager
Click for the
Full article in PDF format
A newly introduced variant of the fusarium head blight
fungus could have serious implications for cereal growers.
The fungus Fusarium graminearum,the main cause of the
cereal disease fusarium head blight(FHB) in Canada, is changing.
Preliminary studies indicate that a new variant of the fungus is rapidly
displacing the traditional type. The new variant seems to produce more
of the fusarium toxin, grow faster and produce more spores. Now a three
year, multi-agency project is investigating this variant to better
understand its characteristics and the implications for controlling FHB.
Even the traditional form of Fusarium graminearum
produces a devastating disease. For instance, annual losses of up to $75
million have been reported in Manitoba due to FHB.
“FHB is the most significant cereal disease in
Canada,” says Dr. Kelly Turkington. He is a plant pathologist at
Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada (AAFC) in Lacombe, Alberta, and has
conducted research into various aspects of FHB. Turkington is leading
the new project, which runs from 2007 to 2009and is funded by the
Western Grains Research Foundation.
Turkington says, “Like many other important crop
diseases, FHB can cause serious yield loss and grade loss. But what sets
Fusarium graminearum apart is that it produces mycotoxins (one of which
is deoxynivalenol, or DON) which limit the use of the grain for
livestock feed and human food. Fusarium infection also compromises the
quality of the seed for use in milling, baking, pasta making, malting
and brewing.”
In addition, FHB is very difficult to control once it
becomes established in an area. Crop management practices such as crop
rotation cannot completely control the disease because the fungus
produces windborne spores, which are easily carried from one field to
another. Although fungicide applications reduce the amount of disease,
they do not eliminate it. Turkington explains, “Soinstead of 10 parts
per million of the toxin in the harvested grain, you may have five parts
per million when you use a fungicide. Five parts per million is still
very high and millers and pasta makers are not going to want the grain.”
Surprising discoveries point the way
Until recently, one toxin type or chemotype of
Fusarium graminearum–called the 15-acetyl deoxynivalenol(15ADON)
chemotype – was the major cause of FHB in Canada. The discovery of a
second toxin type, called 3-acetyldeoxynivalenol (3ADON), came about
through joint efforts by Canadian and US researchers. One of the
scientists involved in the 3ADON discovery is Randy Clear with the Grain
Research Laboratory at the Canadian Grain Commission in Winnipeg. He
specializes in seed borne fungal diseases and has many years of
experience studying fusarium.
Clear says, “We have been collecting isolates of
Fusarium graminearum from 1984 right up to the present time. Over the
past few years, Drs. Todd Ward and Kerry O’Donnell have published four
papers reporting on genetic diversity within Fusarium graminearum. Based
on their analyses of global collections of FHB, in which the isolates
were identified morphologically as F. graminearum, they discovered that
these isolates actually comprised 11 genetically distinct species. The
most common one of these is still called graminearum; however, the
others were given new names primarily to facilitate communication among
scientists around the world. I asked them if they would be willing to
look at our collection to determine if the isolates are graminearum or
one of the other species.”
Ward and O’Donnell are internationally recognized
evolutionary biologists at the United States Department of Agriculture
(USDA) in Peoria, Illinois. They analyzed the Canadian collection and
found that all of the samples were the graminearum species. But their
analysis also provided a surprise. The isolates collected in western
Canada from 1984 to about 1998 were all 15ADON, as expected. But
beginning in1998, 3ADON became more and more common over the years, as
the new chemotype displaced 15ADON.
Because of the unexpected findings, Clear and his
colleagues at the Grain Research Laboratory grew samples of the isolates
in the laboratory to confirm the genetic analysis. They confirmed the
findings, but they also found some surprises. The most startling result
was that the 3ADON samples produced considerably more of the DON toxin
in the laboratory than the 15ADON samples. As well, the 3ADON chemotype
seemed to grow faster and produce more spores.
“Since then, and that was about 2004, we’ve collected
a lot more isolates each year from all across Canada, except
Newfoundland and British Columbia,” says Clear. “The USDA has identified
the chemotypes for us and we’ve grown some of them out. The pattern of
the3ADON chemotype producing more of the DON toxin in the lab has held
true for all the isolates that we have tested from across Canada.”
The serious implications of a possibly more toxigenic
and more aggressive chemotype prompted the researchers to set up this
new project. Seeking out answers to key questions AAFC’s Turkington
speculates about the possible implications of these preliminary
findings: “It could potentially be more difficult to manage FHB with
crop management, like crop rotation and soon. If it’s more aggressive
and produces higher levels of mycotoxin, you could potentially have
greater severity of disease on the crop, which could increase economic
losses due to the disease. It may have implications for how useful
fungicides are in terms of reducing disease and mycotoxin contamination
ingrain. And it may mean that we need to look at a combination of
strategies to deal with this disease issue.”
By analyzing about 3000 isolates of the fungus found
in wheat, oat and barley samples collected in 2005, 2006 and 2007, the
project will comprehensively document the changes occurring in Fusarium
graminearumin Canada. It will also explore the effects of these changes
on toxin production, fungicide sensitivity and disease spread and
severity.
The project is aimed at answering questions like: How
widespread is the3ADON type? How prevalent is it in comparison to
15ADON? Why is 3ADON able to spread so rapidly? Is 3ADON a more prolific
producer of DON in a crop as it is in the laboratory experiments? Is
this chemotype more virulent on some of our more resistant crop
varieties, compared to the older chemotype? Do the two chemotypes
respond differently to fungicides? What are the implications for this
shift to 3ADON in terms of sustainable management of fusarium head
blight?
The project’s multi-disciplinary research team
includes national and international leaders in diverse aspects of
fusarium research. Along with Turkington, Clear, Ward and O’Donnell, the
other team members are Dr. Jeannie Gilbert and Dr. Andy Tekauz at AAFC’s
Cereal Research Centre in Winnipeg, and Tom Nowicki of the Grain
Research Laboratory.
The team members each have responsibility for the
aspect of the project that involves their specific area of expertise:
- Isolation of the fungus from grain samples and
laboratory assessments to compare the chemotypes in terms of their
toxin production, growth rates and spore production (Clear).
- Identification of the toxin potential of the
isolate chemotypes and determination of the distribution of each
chemotype across Canada (Ward and O’Donnell).
- Laboratory assessments to compare the chemotypes
in terms of their toxin production (Nowicki).
- Comparison of the chemotypes in terms of their
ability to cause disease on actual crop material in growth chambers
(Tekauz and Gilbert).
- Laboratory assessments to compare the chemotypes
in terms of growth rates, spore production and their sensitivity to
fungicides (Turkington).
With Canadian and US researchers working together, the
project will contribute to a broader picture of how the distribution
patterns of 15ADON, 3ADON and any other chemotypes of the fungus are
changing in North America.
Clear says, “Without doubt there are changes happening
within the diverse populations of Fusarium graminearumin North America.
We want to find out why there are changes and what the impacts could
be.”
Current distribution of the 3ADON chemotype
“Three-acetyl toxin-producing isolates of Fusarium
graminearum are quite common in Europe and South America,” notes Randy
Clear. The genetic analysis by Ward and O’Donnell indicates that the
3ADONtype was likely introduced into North America from one or more of
these outside sources. “With the worldwide movement of grain, it’s not
surprising that the 3-acetyl type could have been introduced
accidentally into North America,” says Clear. “What is surprising is
that it is replacing the existing 15-acetyl population very quickly, a
population that is no slouch when it comes to causing head blight in
crops.” So far, the analysis of the Canadian Grain Commission’s
collection of Fusarium graminearum shows two patterns in the occurrence
of the3ADON chemotype, one in the east and the other in the west. In
eastern Canada, Prince Edward Island currently has the highest
proportion of 3ADON, with nearly all isolates being 3ADON. As you move
west, the proportion of 3ADONgradually declines until you reach Ontario
where less than 10 percent of isolates are 3ADON. In western Canada, the
percentage of 3ADON is highest in Manitoba, where nearly half of the
isolates are 3ADON. Again, as you move west away from that peak, the
proportion of 3ADONgradually declines.
Winter 2009 Seed Guide Now Online
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