January17, 2024
Introduction:
Read more of the Potato News Today article here: https://www.potatonewstoday.com/2024/0 ... the-u-s/(Potato News Today) Potato crops across the state of Pennsylvania and in the U.S. may face the threat of newly identified pathogen strains, according to Penn State researchers who made the finding and aim to develop management strategies. They published their work in the journal Systematic and Applied Microbiology.
As Katie Bohn reports in an article published on the Penn State website, the researchers collected potato stems or tubers that exhibited symptoms of black leg or soft rot — including wilting, stunting, black lesions and rotting tubers, among others, — from 26 potato fields in Pennsylvania. These diseases, which can lead to crop loss, are caused caused predominantly by bacteria in the Pectobacterium species and more recently the Dickeya species.
The researchers isolated, cultured and identified 456 samples of bacteria infecting the potatoes, including six species of Pectobacterium and one strain of Dickeya that previously had not been reported in Pennsylvania. One species of Pectobacterium previously had not been reported in the U.S.
Carolee Bull, corresponding author and professor of bacterial systematics and plant pathology, of plant pathology and of environmental microbiology, said the findings could inform methods for detecting and quantifying the pathogens causing blackleg and soft rot in Pennsylvania and beyond.
“In addition to surveillance, these insights could also help us better understand disease epidemiology,” Bull said. “For example, the pathogens may have different optimum temperatures for growing or for producing these symptoms in the potatoes. So, the severity of the disease may change depending on different climate conditions.”
For a technical presentation of the study results as published in ScienceDirect: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/ ... ia%3Dihub
