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Experiments in selecting for resistance to downy mildew in sugar beet
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 27 March 2009
Summary
In tests with seedlings in the glasshouse, significant differences in susceptibility to downy mildew, caused by Peronospora farinosa f. sp. betae, were observed between individual stocks of sugar beet. The resistance of a particular stock in glasshouse tests was not always a reliable guide to its resistance in the field. There were also serious discrepancies between the results of tests with seedlings and those with mature plants in the field, suggesting that the resistance of certain stocks, relative to one another, may vary with increasing age of the host plant. This contention was supported by evidence from a field experiment in which the susceptibility of several sugar-beet stocks was compared throughout the growing season. It also appears that changes in environmental conditions affected resistance to downy mildew more in some stocks than in others.
Progenies of selected plants that had not shown severe symptoms of downy mildew, after exposure to natural inoculation with P. farinosafor more than 3 months in the field, were much more resistant than the parent stocks. This showed that a single generation of selection under suitable conditions can significantly improve the resistance of sugar-beet breeding stocks to downy mildew.
An inbred sugar-beet line of American origin showed exceptional resistance to downy mildew in experiments under glass and in the field. Inoculated plants of this line usually showed no symptoms of the disease and P. farinosa did not produce conidia on them. These results show that sources of extreme resistance are present in cultivated sugar beet and suggest that an excellent control of downy mildew in Britain may eventually be achieved through the use of resistant varieties.
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- Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1968
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