Soil Temperature Determines the Reaction of Olive Cultivars to Verticillium dahliae Pathotypes

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Author
Calderón, Rocío
Lucena, Carlos
Trapero-Casas, J.L.
Zarco-Tejada, Pablo J.
Navas Cortés, Juan A.
Publisher
PLOSDate
2014Subject
Verticillium dahliaeOlive wilt
Defoliating pathotype
Soil temperature
Plant stress
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Background: Development of Verticillium wilt in olive, caused by the soil-borne fungus Verticillium dahliae, can be
influenced by biotic and environmental factors. In this study we modeled i) the combined effects of biotic factors (i.e.,
pathotype virulence and cultivar susceptibility) and abiotic factors (i.e., soil temperature) on disease development and ii) the
relationship between disease severity and several remote sensing parameters and plant stress indicators.
Methodology: Plants of Arbequina and Picual olive cultivars inoculated with isolates of defoliating and non-defoliating V.
dahliae pathotypes were grown in soil tanks with a range of soil temperatures from 16 to 32uC. Disease progression was
correlated with plant stress parameters (i.e., leaf temperature, steady-state chlorophyll fluorescence, photochemical
reflectance index, chlorophyll content, and ethylene production) and plant growth-related parameters (i.e., canopy length
and dry weight).
Findings: Disease development in plants infected with the defoliating pathotype was faster and more severe in Picual.
Models estimated that infection with the defoliating pathotype was promoted by soil temperatures in a range of 16 to 24uC
in cv. Picual and of 20 to 24uC in cv. Arbequina. In the non-defoliating pathotype, soil temperatures ranging from 16 to 20uC
were estimated to be most favorable for infection. The relationship between stress-related parameters and disease severity
determined by multinomial logistic regression and classification trees was able to detect the effects of V. dahliae infection
and colonization on water flow that eventually cause water stress.
Conclusions: Chlorophyll content, steady-state chlorophyll fluorescence, and leaf temperature were the best indicators for
Verticillium wilt detection at early stages of disease development, while ethylene production and photochemical reflectance
index were indicators for disease detection at advanced stages. These results provide a better understanding of the
differential geographic distribution of V. dahliae pathotypes and to assess the potential effect of climate change on
Verticillium wilt development.
