Research Topic: disease screening

Standardization of challenge inoculation protocols for artificial infection of Fusarium acutatum and Fusarium falciforme causing basal rot of onion

This research develops standardized methods for infecting onion bulbs with fungal diseases in laboratory settings to test which onion varieties can resist the infection. Two Fusarium fungi species that cause onion basal rot were tested using five different inoculation techniques. The cotton swab method proved most effective and practical for screening large numbers of onion plants. These findings will help farmers and plant breeders develop onion varieties resistant to these economically important diseases.

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Inoculum and inoculation techniques: key steps in studying pathogenicity and resistance to Sclerotinia stem rot in oilseed rape

This review examines different methods scientists use to test how oilseed rape plants resist a destructive fungal disease called Sclerotinia stem rot. The researchers compare various ways to infect plants with the fungus, from simple lab techniques using diseased grains to complex field trials that mimic natural infection. The findings help plant breeders identify and develop oilseed rape varieties that can better resist this economically important disease, reducing the need for chemical fungicides.

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