Agriculture Reference
In-Depth Information
CHAPTER 14
DISEASES CAUSED BY SOIL-BORNE PATHOGENS
P. LUCAS
14.1 INTRODUCTION
The soil is a favourable habitat for microorganisms and is inhabited by a wide range
of bacteria, fungi, algae, viruses and protozoa. Soils contain large numbers of
microorganisms - usually between one and ten million per gram of soil - with bacteria
and fungi the most prevalent. Some microorganisms present in soil are also able to
infect plants. These so-called soil-borne plant pathogens may complete their life cycle
in the soil, or may spend part of it on the aerial parts of the plant (Bruehl, 1987).
Plant roots take up the mineral nutrients and water essential for plant growth, but
they also release a wide range of organic compounds into the surrounding soil. Thus,
the area of soil in contact with the plant root, the rhizosphere, is a site of intense
microbial activity. Not surprisingly, many microorganisms are more frequent on the
surface of plant roots and in the rhizosphere than in the bulk soil not influenced by the
presence of roots. The rhizosphere is therefore a key soil habitat, in which numerous
interactions occur between plant roots and soil microorganisms. These interactions
determine growth conditions for both the plant and the microorganisms in the
rhizosphere.
Soil-borne pathogens require a susceptible plant for the development of their
parasitic phase, but they may persist in the soil as saprophytes on residues, or as
resistant, dormant forms, from several weeks to several years, depending on their
biology. Both parasitic and saprophytic phases may be affected by the physico-
chemical and biological characteristics of the soil. Soil-borne pathogens generally
affect the root system of plants or the base of the stem (foot), in some cases
developing on upper parts of the plant through aerial dispersal from soil inoculum or
via transport and/or growth in the vessels, leading to vascular diseases.
Such pathogens may cause extensive damage to crops by limiting water and
nutrient uptake (root necrosis) and/or transfer towards the upper parts of the plant
(vascular disease), or by reducing the quality of crop products developing
underground (root or tuber rot, gall, proliferation, etc.). This damage has led to the
focusing of considerable effort on improving our understanding of the biology and
ecology of these diseases, with the aim of developing control methods.
This chapter, after having identified specific characteristics of soil-borne pathogens,
will provide an overview of the research on these pathogens carried out to date. It will
then deal with recent advances in epidemiology, bearing in mind that although soil
microbiology has been an area of intense research, epidemiological studies have been
developed to a lesser extent for soil-borne than for foliar diseases (McDonald, 1994).
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