Wheat varieties susceptible to new strains of yellow rust fungus: study                                                                 

      

Agriculture scientists have cautioned about likely spread of extremely virulent strains of fungus that causes yellow rust in wheat to which currently used wheat cultivars show high susceptibility. The situation is particularly grim as the bread wheat cultivar HD267 that currently occupies 10 to 12 million hectare area is susceptible to these new strains.

Yellow rust disease of wheat, also known as stripe rust of wheat, is a disease caused by fungus Puccinia frequently found in cold wheat growing regions such as North Western Plains Zone and Northern Hills Zone. This infection which causes reduction of kernel numbers per spike and decreases the weight of wheat kernels is capable of causing up to 70% decline in wheat yields.

Currently used wheat cultivars in India have a part of rye chromosome which confers resistance to yellow rust and powdery mildew disease. Over the years, the strains of fungus which can infect these resistant cultivars have become prominent and are spreading. Although fungicides such as propiconazole, tebuconazole and triadimefon are being used for combating yellow rust of wheat, the imparting genetic resistance to plants is preferred as it is cheap, effective and eco-friendly way of fighting plant diseases.

Scientists from ICAR-Indian Institute of Wheat and Barley Research (IIWBR) at Shimla and Karnal have identified three new extremely virulent strains of this fungus capable of causing severe loss to wheat productivity in India. First detected in India during 2013-2014, these three strains (110S119, 238S119 and 110S84) are now aggressively growing in numbers.


" Yellow rust disease of wheat, also known as stripe rust of wheat, is a disease caused by fungus Puccinia frequently found in cold wheat growing regions such as North Western Plains Zone and Northern Hills Zone. "

To better understand evolution of this resistance, scientists have studied composition of a part of their genomes to understand their relationship with other fungal strains. Such a genetic cataloguing of pathogens also aids in keeping a track of spread and damage caused by a particular strains.

Further, scientists tested 56 newly released varieties of wheat for resistance against these new strains. For this, the seeds of these varieties were grown and the seedlings were infected with these strains. To their dismay, none of the newly released variety was found to be resistant to all resistant strains.

Scientists also screened 64 new advanced lines of wheat for resistance and found that 11 of them were resistant to these newly emerged resistant fungal strains. Deployment of these advance lines can help to fight these newly emerged pathogens.

“To combat these new strains, we are ready with the resistance sources and at the same time regularly screening ‘advance varietal trial’ material. Our regional station keep a watch on the occurrence of new races and are designing strategies for management of new virulent strains,” said Dr. Subhash Chander Bhardwaj, member of the research team and a scientist at IIWBR Shimla, while speaking to India Science Wire.

The study results have been published in Journal of Plant Pathology. The research team from Shimla included Om Prakash Gangwar, Subodh Kumar, Pramod Prasad and Subhash Chander Bhardwaj; and Prem Lal Kashyap and Hanif Khan from Karnal.
India Science Wire

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