T. Hunter
University of Bristol
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Fungal Biology | 1993
M. H. Pei; D.J. Royle; T. Hunter
Six species of Melampsora: M. salicis-albae, M. larici-pentandrae, M. amygdalinae, M. capraearum, M. ribesii-viminalis and M. epitea , were identified among 26 willow leaf samples collected mainly in SW England. Identification of species was based on the morphology of the uredinial and telial stages as well as on the results of inoculations of the aecial hosts. M. epitea occurred alone in 18 leaf samples, and together with M. ribesii-viminalis in one further sample. Basidiospores produced from teliospores of the autoecious M. amygdalinae infected Salix triandra (a species of tree willows). All other species were heteroecious, with M. larici-pentandrae, M. capraearum and M. epitea producing spermogonia and aecia on Larix decidua (European larch), and less readily on L. kaempferi (Japanese larch). M. ribesii-viminalis and a form of M. epitea from S. purpurea , occasionally formed spermogonia but not aecia on Ribes spp. M. epitea, M. capraearum , and M. ribesii-viminalis occurred on cultivars of shrub willows which are favoured for short-rotation, coppiced energy cropping in the U.K.
Biomass & Bioenergy | 1999
M. H. Pei; T. Hunter; C. Ruiz
The natural occurrence of Melampsora rusts in biomass willow plantations for renewable energy was investigated at four sites in the UK during 1992–1994. Three sites, located at Long Ashton, south west England, Loughgall, Northern Ireland, and Craibstone, Scotland, were rust/clone trials that contained standard 24 willow clones and the fourth site at Markington, northern England, had a similar range of willows. Larch-alternating M. epitea (M. larici-epitea) was found to be most prevalent. Melampsora capraearum was predominant on S. caprea hybrids and the stem-infecting form occurred mainly on S. viminalis ‘Bowles Hybrid’. To identify different pathotypes in larch-alternating M. epitea, field rust samples were tested for pathogenicity in the laboratory using eight willow differentials. A total of 12 pathotypes were identified. More pathotypes were found at Long Ashton, Loughgall and Markington, where extensive, long-term willow plantings were grown, than at Craibstone, where the planting was more isolated. A major breakdown of rust resistance in S. ×mollissima ‘Q83’ in the UK in 1992 was caused by the emergence of a new pathotype. Our results also suggest that the larch-alternating M. epitea found in UK biomass willow plantations may consist of genetically separate populations. This would provide an opportunity to plant willow clones that harbour different mating populations, in mixed plantations in order to enhance the property of mixtures to suppress rust.
Fungal Biology | 1995
M. H. Pei; D.J. Royle; T. Hunter
A form of Melampsora rust was found to cause stem cankers on Salix viminalis clones in south-west England. Comparative studies suggested that the rust differed from the leaf-infecting form (M. epitea var. epitea f. sp. larici-epitea typica) by causing infection of both young stems and shoot tips, having distinct host specificity, and existing predominantly as the uredinial stage. After incubation for a period at low temperature the rust produced only poorly developed hypophyllous telia similar to those of the leaf-infecting form. In the field, this form of rust overwintered in buds or cankered stems of infected willows. Survey results of willow plantations in the U.K. in 1991 showed that the stem-infecting form occurred in most study sites including Northern Ireland and Scotland. The leaf-infecting form was present in all locations, whereas M. ribesii-viminalis was occasionally found only in south-west England.
Fungal Biology | 1999
Z.W. Yuan; M. H. Pei; T. Hunter; C. Ruiz; D.J. Royle
Using leaf disc techniques, nine isolates of the mycoparasite Sphaerellopsis filum were examined for pathogenicity to Melampsora epitea, the most important species of rust in renewable energy willow plantations. Five isolates were derived from Melampsora spp. on willows and poplar, one from Puccinia coronata on couch grass, two from Phragmidium violaceum on blackberry and one from Triphragmiopsis laricinum on larch. Two inoculation experiments were carried out. In the first, S. Filum and rust were applied simultaneously on to leaf discs of Salix burjatica cv. Korso, in the second, leaf discs were inoculated with rust initially, then the resulting rust uredinial pustules were inoculated with S. filum. In both experiments, all S. filum isolates from Melampsora spp., and that from P. coronata, developed pycnidia on willow rust. No pycnidia were produced from the other three isolates. Among isolates which produced pycnidia, the frequency of rust pustules colonized by S. filum and suppression of rust spore production differed markedly. In the first experiment, 55-99% pustules were colonized and rust spore production was suppressed by 64-98%. In the second, the proportions were 33-97% and 53-73%, respectively. Suppression of rust sporulation was closely correlated with the frequency of rust pustules bearing S. filum pycnidia. The results suggest that S. filum is composed of pathogenically specialized populations differing widely in their virulence.
European Journal of Plant Pathology | 1989
K. J. Brent; G. A. Carter; D.W. Hollomon; T. Hunter; T. Locke; M. Proven
In replicate-plot field experiments done in the UK, at one site in Avon for 3 years and another in Warwickshire for 2 years, application of ethirimol or triadimenol sprays or seed treatments was followed by decreases in sensitivity of mildew samples to the particular fungicide applied. Application of ethirimol-triadimenol or tridemorph-triadimenol mixtures caused smaller or no decreases in sensitivity. Differences between isolates in responses to ethirimol and to triadimenol treatment were usually negatively correlated. Early-season inoculum differed in fungicide sensitivity between sites. At one site sensitivity shifted markedly from one season to another. No clear interactions between cultivar, mildew pathotype and shifts in fungicide response could be discerned. There were no major differences in resistance build-up between seed or spray treatments.SamenvattingIn veldexperimenten met herhalingen uitgevoerd in Engeland, gedurende een periode van 3 jaar in Avon en gedurende een periode van 2 jaar in Warwickshire, werd na behandeling van zomergerst met ethirimol of triadimenol een verminderde gevoeligheid van meeldauw voor deze fungiciden waargenomen.Behandelingen met mengsels van ethirimol-triadimenol of tridemorf-triadimenol gaven weinig tot geen verminderde gevoeligheid. Verminderde gevoeligheid van isolaten voor ethirimol was meestal gecorreleerd met een verhoogde gevoeligheid voor triadimenol en omgekeerd. Vroeg in het seizoen werd in de meeldauwpopulatie op de twee proefvelden een verschil in gevoeligheid voor de fungiciden waargenomen. Op één proefveld trad van het ene op het andere seizoen een aanzienlijke verandering in de gevoeligheid voor de fungiciden op. Er was geen duidelijke correlatie tussen de waargenomen verminderde gevoeligheid voor de fungiciden en de gebruikte cultivars of voorkomende fysios. Verminderde gevoeligheid voor de fungiciden werd zowel bij zaadbehandeling als bij het bespuiten van planten waargenomen.
European Journal of Plant Pathology | 2003
M. H. Pei; C. Ruiz; Judy R Harris; T. Hunter
Four poplar clones were inoculated with four isolates of Melampsora larici-populina at seven spore concentrations (inoculum densities up to 680 spores cm−2 using a leaf-disc method. Disease reactions were recorded using a digital camera. The number and size of uredinia were examined using image analysis software and the number of spores produced per leaf disc was counted. The infection efficiency was estimated in a range of 0.008–0.167 and the pustule diameter measured 0.75–0.94 mm. Rust resistance/susceptibility was expressed by the differences in both the number and the size of uredinia. Within a clone/isolate combination, pustule diameter and the number of spores produced per pustule did not differ significantly between different levels of inoculum density. There was a close correlation between the pustule area and spore yield. When Spearman rank correlation was tested between the disease variables, a close correlation was found between pustule number and pustule area per leaf disc (0.98) and between the number of spores produced and the pustule area/number per leaf disc (0.94 and 0.92, respectively). There was significant correlation between the number and the diameter of pustules (0.54, P < 0.001).
European Journal of Plant Pathology | 2000
M. H. Pei; Z.W. Yuan; T. Hunter; C. Ruiz
An outbreak of rust on Salix × mollissima (S. triandra × S. viminalis) ‘Q83’, an important biomass willow, was first observed at several locations in the UK in 1992. Rust collections obtained from ‘Q83’ in 1992 at Long Ashton (south west England), Markington (Northern England) and Loughgall (Northern Ireland), were tested for pathogenicity and examined using amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP). All collections showed the same pathogenicity patterns on the eight willow differentials and were assigned to f.sp. larici-epitea typica of Melampsora epitea. A total of 304 AFLP markers was scored for 54 rust isolates, 20 from Long Ashton, 20 from Markington and 14 from Loughgall. Cluster analysis placed the isolates into three distinct groups according to the collection sites. Within each site, Markington isolates were least variable, Nei & Lis similarity coefficients averaging 0.996. Average similarities within isolates from Long Ashton and Loughgall were 0.899 and 0.883, respectively. Average per-locus diversity within site (Hj′), calculated using Shannon information index, was 0.014 in Markington, 0.24 in Long Ashton and 0.23 in Loughgall population. Most diversity (69.1%) was partitioned between populations. An analysis of molecular variance (AMOVA) attributed 85.8% of variance to between populations and 14.2% to the individuals within populations. The results suggest that, in 1992, this previously unknown pathotype was not spread from a common source but from separate sources. The AFLP analysis and early records on the host range of M. epitea indicate that the rust virulent to S. × mollissima may have existed in nature before 1992.
Molecular Ecology | 2009
Carlos Bayon; M. H. Pei; C. Ruiz; T. Hunter; A. Karp; Ian Tubby
Complex life strategies are common among plant pathogens belonging to rust fungi (Uredinales). The heteroecious willow rust Melampsora larici‐epitea produces five spore stages and alternates on larch (Larix). To shed light on the epidemiology of this pathogen, amplified fragment length polymorphisms (AFLPs) were used to determine the genetic diversity and genetic structure of rust samples collected from coppice willow (Salix) plantations at three UK sites (LA, CA and MC) over three sampling dates (September 2000, July 2001 and September 2001). Of the total of 819 isolates, 465 were unique AFLP phenotypes and there was a shift in genotype diversity between the two seasons (0.67 in 2000 and 0.87–0.89 in 2001). No phenotypes were common between the two seasons within a site, suggesting that the rust did not overwinter as an asexual stage within plantations. A temporal analysis detected large amounts of genetic drift (FS = 0.15–0.26) between the two seasons and very small effective population sizes (Ne = 2–3) within sites. These results all point to a new colonization of the plantations by the rust in the second season (2001). The FST‐analogue values were ΦCT = 0.121, Weir and Cockerham’s θ = 0.086 and the Bayesian estimate θB = 0.087–0.096. The results suggest that the sources of inoculum were somewhat localized and the same sources were mainly responsible for disease epidemics in LA and CA over the two seasons. The relatively low FST‐values among sites (0.055–0.13) suggest the existence of significant gene flow among the three sampled sites.
Fungal Biology | 1998
Z.W. Yuan; M. H. Pei; T. Hunter; D.J. Royle
Eudarluca caricis, the teleomorph of Sphaerellopsis filum, was found on blackberry rust (Phragmidium violaceum) in south west England and its morphology is described. Cultures derived from ascospores produced pycnidial conidiomata and conidia typical of S. filum, confirming the connection between the meiotic and mitotic stages of the fungus. Microconidia were also found in the cultures derived from ascospores. Conidiomata developed on the majority of uredinial pustules of P. violaceum 10 d after inoculating detached, uredinia-bearing blackbery leaves with the conidia from the cultures derived from ascospores.
Fungal Biology | 1999
M. H. Pei; D.J. Royle; T. Hunter
Crossing and selfing experiments were carried out with six field collections and five isolates belonging to three formae speciales, larici-epitea typica (LET), larici-daphnoides (LD), and larici-retusae (LR), of willow rust, Melampsora epitea . European larch ( Larix decidua ) was inoculated with basidiospores produced on overwintered telial leaves and the resulting spermagonial lesions on larch needles subsequently paired in vitro . In two crosses between LR and LD involving a total of 439 lesion pairs, only two cultures obtained were identified as hybrids. These two cultures were non-pathogenic to the maternal host Salix burjatica cv. Korso and weakly pathogenic to the paternal host S. daphnoides cv. Meikle. No identifiable hybrids were obtained from 56 lesion pairs between LET and LD. In a cross between LET as receptor and LD as donor, one-third of the lesions formed aecia. In the reciprocal combination, however, less than 1% developed aecia. All F 1 cultures between LET and LR were weakly pathogenic to the parental hosts S. viminalis cv. Mullatin and S. burjatica cv. Korso. When three of the F 1 cultures were used to produce telia, only one developed mature teliospores. Subsequent selfing experiments showed that this culture was predominantly self-sterile, with only 1 % of lesions producing aecia. In selfing and crossing two pathotypes within the same f. spp. , 20–40 % of needles produced aecia and the rate of aecial formation was similar in both directions. The results obtained suggest that M. epitea is heterothallic and the sexual compatibility is controlled by a pair of alleles at a locus. It is concluded that the three f. spp. are genetically different populations and ecologically fit new pathotypes cannot arise easily as a result of hybridization between them. Within a f. sp. , however, many pathotypes exist or will occur due to exchange of genes for virulence during the sexual life-cycle.