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Venturia inaequalis trapped: molecular quantification of airborne inoculum using volumetric and rotating arm samplers

Authors :
Wendy Van Hemelrijck
Dany Bylemans
Kris Van Poucke
Sarah Croes
Kurt Heungens
Sanne Torfs
An Ceustermans
Jelle Van Campenhout
Wannes Keulemans
Source :
European Journal of Plant Pathology. 155:1319-1332
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2019.

Abstract

Site-specific high throughput monitoring of airborne ascospores of Venturia inaequalis, the causal agent of apple scab, can improve existing warning systems. A new qPCR assay was developed to quantify ascospores collected by a simple rotating-arm spore sampler. The qPCR assay was highly specific and sensitive, with a limit of quantification of 20 ascospores per sample. The new detection system was compared to sampling with a traditional Burkard volumetric spore trap and to microscopic quantification. During controlled ascospore release experiments in a closed environment, strong correlations (ρ: 0.96 to 0.99) were observed between the two types of samplers and the two methods of quantification but significantly larger numbers of spores (log difference: 0.43 to 0.69) were obtained when using the rotating-arm sampler and when using molecular quantification. During comparisons under outdoor conditions over a three-year period, reasonable correlations between the techniques (average ρ = 0.61) were observed. When rotating-arm samplers operate continuously they can get saturated but their counts still correlated better with those from the Burkard sampler than when they only operate during rain and until two hours after. This suggests that ascospores were also captured outside of rain events. Based on these comparisons, molecular quantification of spores captured with the rotating-arm sampler appears to be a sensitive and reliable method to determine airborne ascospores of V. inaequalis and holds promise as a tool to guide targeted fungicide applications in commercial orchards as well as to increase our knowledge of the aerobiology of this pathogen.

Details

ISSN :
15738469 and 09291873
Volume :
155
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
European Journal of Plant Pathology
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........d41b3eb68361eaf03b5bec8a03cdc746
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10658-019-01858-0