Soil-Environmental Factors Involved in the Development of Root Rot/Vine on Cucurbits Caused by Monosporascus cannonballus

  • Kwon, Mi-Kyung (Applied Plant Science Division, Biotechnology Research Institute, Chonnam National University) ;
  • Hong, Jeong-Rae (Applied Plant Science Division, Biotechnology Research Institute, Chonnam National University) ;
  • Kim, Yong-Hwan (National Institute of Agricultural Science, Technology, Rural Development Administraton) ;
  • Kim, Ki-Chung (Applied Plant Science Division, Biotechnology Research Institute, Chonnam National University)
  • 발행 : 2001.02.01

초록

A root rot/vine decline disease occurred naturally on bottle gourd-stocked watermelon, melon, oriental melon and squash grown in greenhouses, but not on these plants grown in fields. Self-rooted watermelon, cucumber, pumpkin and luffa were also proven to be hosts of the pathogen by artificial inoculation in this experiment. The pathogen was identified as Monosporascus cannonballus by comparing microscopic characteristics of fungal structures with those of previously identified fungal strains. Our field investigations showed that the temperature and electric conductivity of soil in infected greenhouses were higher and the soil moisture content was lower than in noninfected greenhouses. To investigate soil-environmental factors affecting disease development, greenhouse trials and inoculation experiments were conducted. The host plants inoculated and grown under conditions of high soil temperature and electrical conductivity ($35\pm2^{\circ}$, 3.2-3.5 mS) and with low soil moisture content (pF 3.0-4.5) were most severely damaged by the fungal disease. Since plants growing in greenhouses ae usually exposed to such environmental conditions, this may be the reason why the monosporascus root rot/vine decline disease has occurred only on cucurbits cultivated in greenhouses but not in field conditions.

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