Forecasting of Airborne Conidia Quantities and Potential Insect Associations of Cryphonectria parasitica , the Causal Agent of Chestnut Blight, in England

Sweet chestnut, an Asiatic tree introduced in many parts of Europe including the United Kingdom, is planted for nut production, timber, and amenity. Its major threat is the disease called blight, caused by the fungus , which infects through wounds by airborne spores. Field trapping using sticky rods...

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Published inJournal of fungi (Basel) Vol. 10; no. 3; p. 181
Main Authors Romon-Ochoa, Pedro, Samal, Pankajini, Pace, Tom, Newman, Tim, Oram, Mark, Baxter, Nicholas, Manning, John A S, Biddle, Mick, Barnard, Kerry, Inward, Daegan, Taylor, Paul, Hendry, Steven, Pérez-Sierra, Ana, Ward, Lisa
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Switzerland MDPI AG 28.02.2024
MDPI
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Summary:Sweet chestnut, an Asiatic tree introduced in many parts of Europe including the United Kingdom, is planted for nut production, timber, and amenity. Its major threat is the disease called blight, caused by the fungus , which infects through wounds by airborne spores. Field trapping using sticky rods rotating traps was performed in an infected area in Devon (between May 2021 and April 2023). An improved dual hydrolysis Taqman probes real-time PCR was used. The number of spores was calculated by comparing the cycle threshold to the Ct of standards with known amounts of conidia or known target fragment copies cloned into a plasmid. Weekly spore counts were in the range of around 60 to approximately 8.5 × 10 , with fluctuations of peaks (mainly in late summer-autumn 2021) and troughs. The effects of weather parameters were modelled, finding correlations between spore numbers and temperature, humidity, dewpoint, rainfall, wind speed, and wind duration. Additionally, an insect trapping was performed to confirm the presence/absence and quantity of conidia potentially phoretic on some insects by using the same molecular approach. None of the ten collected insect species harboured spores of this fungus.
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ISSN:2309-608X
2309-608X
DOI:10.3390/jof10030181