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DISPERSAL OF PLANT PATHOGENS
COURSE NO. PPATH 322
COURSE TITLE: PRINCIPLES OF PLANT PATHOLOGY AND DISEASES OF FIELD CROPS

K. M. GOLAM DASTOGEER
LECTURER
DEPARTMENT OF PLANT PATHOLOGY
BANGLADESH AGRICULTURAL UNIVERSITY
Topics
1. What is DISSEMINATION of plant
pathogens
2. Necessity of dissemination
3. Types of dispersal
4. Modes of pathogen dissemination
a. Winds, Water, Human, Birds, Insects,
Animals—Indirect
b. Seed, plant parts, Soil-----direct

3
Dissemination/dispersal/transmission
Transport of spores or infectious bodies, acting as
inoculum, from one host to another host at various
distances resulting in the spread of the disease.
or
Displacement of a plant pathogen from its
place of production or origin to a suitable
place where it can grow/establish

4
EFFECTIVE DISPERSAL
If displacement occurs on a susceptible host and where
the environment is suitable, the pathogen can grow and
multiply

Ineffective Dispersal

When plant pathogen does not get any medium for its survival.
For example, if it falls on a stone
Why Pathogen Disseminate

•Food and nutrition
•Survival
•Complete life cycle
•Reproduction
6
Agents of dissemination
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.

Wind-----------------------------------------Anemochory
Water----------------------------------------Hydrochory
Soil
Seed
Animal---------------------------------------Zoochory
Human-------------------------------------- Anthropochory
Mechinary used in agriculture
Transport system
7
The dispersal of infectious plant pathogens in space occurs
through two ways:
Disease

1. Autonomous or direct or active dispersal
In this method the dispersal of plant pathogens
takes place through soil, seed and planting
material during normal agronomic operations.
There is no major role of external agencies like
insects, wind, water, etc. in this type of dispersal.
2. Indirect or passive dispersal------- insects, wind,
water, etc. in this type of dispersal insects, wind,
water, Human

8
Wind as a means of dispersal
Short distance dissemination
sporangia of downy mildew fungi,
conidia of powdery mildew fungi
and basidiospores of rust fungi
Long Distance
•Uredospores of rust fungi, Chlamydospores of smut fungi
and conidia of Alternaria, Helminthosporium and Pyricularia,
Wind

Wind disseminating fungi
Bacteria
•Numerous spore
•discharge of spores with sufficient force X. malvacearum, Erwinia amylovora
• Light in weight
Nematode
• smaller size
Anguina tritici, Heterodera
•Thich outer wall
•Less affinity to water
Virus Vector
•19 Viruses and phytoplasmas –
•E.g. Most fungi except synchytriaceae, • insect and mite vectors by wind
Plasmodiophoromyces, fusarium
Factors affecting wind disemination
•

•
•

Periodicity of wind
– Diurnal
– Nocturnal
Turbulance in air
Air current
– Steady-horizontal
– Breeze & turbulance-Vertical
– Irregular-Multidimensional
Record of air velocity and direction tells the direction and distance of spore
dispersal and thereby helps to forecast neww disease outbreak is likely to
occur

11
Some Example:
•P.Graminis tritici
• Horizontal---600Km
• Altitude-------500m above of the infected field
•P. Infestans
• Horizontal---200m to 600Km
•Spores of Molds
•Aspergillus
•Penicillium
•Cladosporium
• Altitude----------2000m above
International Dispersal
From America to Europe ---------------------------Puccinia Striformis
From Newzealand to Austrslia--------------------P. Striformis
From England to Denmark--------------------------Powdery Mildew of Barely

Glass with glycerine

Microscope

Fig. Spore Trap
13
Dispersal by water

Surface running water
after heavy rains
during irrigation: canals and wells
Ex: The mycelial fragments, spores or sclerotia of fungi,
Colletotrichum falcatum, Fusarium, Ganoderma, Macrophomina,
Pythium, Phytophthora, Sclerotium, etc.,

 Long distance ------ floods
By rain splash ------------splash dispersal
•
•

•
•

Most efficient meas for bacteria.
Rain drops falling with force on sori, pustules, cankers or even soil surface
may splash the propagules
– in small droplets and enable them to land on neighbouring healthy
susceptible surfaces or
– the water droplets may be carried to long distances by air.
Ex: Bacterial leaf spot of rice (Xanthomonas campestris pv. oryzae),
Bacterial leaf streak of rice (Xanthomonas campestris pv. oryzicola)
Fungal spores and bacteria present in the air or plant surface are washed
downward by rain splash or drops from overhead irrigation and are
deposited on susceptible healthy plants.
15
1) Animate agents
Insects
Fungal pathogens:
honey secretions having attractive odours.
Ex: Sugary disease of sorghum
Bacterial pathogens
Cucumber wilt- E. tracheiphila --------stripped cucumber beetles (Acalymma vittata) a---------spotted cucumber beetle (Diabrotica undecimipunctata).
Viral pathgens:
• More than 80 % of viral and phytoplasmall diseases
• Laegest family- Homoptera- Aphids and leaf hoppers
• mealy bugs and scale insects (Coccoidae)
• whiteflies (Aleurodidae)
•
hoppers (Membracidae) in Homoptera also transmit virus diseases.
•
•

Mechanical
– Fungi-----------------------------Legs
– Bacteria--------------------------Bristles
– Viruses---------------------------Wings
– Mycoplasma--------------------Abdomen
• Biological
Transmit through sexual process from generation to generation

Insect

Specificity of Insect Transmission
Aphids----------------Mosaic group---------------Tomato mosaic, Papaya mosaic, potato leaf roll, chilli mosaic
Leaf Hopper---------Yellows ---------------------------------Tungro of rice
Thrips------------------Spots with concentric ring---------Pineaple yellow spots
Whiteflies-------------Thickening of veins/veinlets------Tobacco leaf curl, Tomato leaf curl

17
e) Human beings- more direct than indirect
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

Transportation of seeds (seed trade): Ex: Late blight of potato, Downy
mildew of grapevine, Citrus canker, Fusarium wilt of banana, etc.
Planting diseased seed materials: Planting diseased bulbs, bulbils,
corms, tubers, rhizomes, cuttings, etc., of
During adoption of normal farming practices:
Cultivation, planting, irrigation, weeding, pruning etc.,
Spores can be carried by workers clothing’s, shoes, and hands etc.,
By use of contaminated implements:
By use of diseased grafting and budding material
f) Dispersal by phanerogamic parasites:
• Phanerogamic parasites transmit the viruses by acting as a
bridge between the diseased and healthy plants.
• Ex: Dodder(Cuscuta California, C. campesris, C. subinclusa
etc.)
• Cuscuta subinclusa----Cucumber mosaic virus
• Cuscuta california -----Tobacco mosaic virus, Tobacco rattle
virus, Tomato spotted wilt virus
• Cuscuta campestris - Tomato bushy stunt virus
19
g) Role of birds
• Disperse flowering parasites and certain fungi.
• Stem segments of dodder are carried by birds for preparing
their nests
• Seeds of Loranthus
• Spores of chestnut blight fungus
• Cleistothecia of many powdery mildew fungi are carried by
feathers of birds.

20
Farm and wild animals:
Cattle feeding on diseased fodder ingest the
viable fungal propagules (spores or oospores
or sclerotia) and pass out as such in the dung.
soil inhabiting fungi especially sclerotia adhere
to the hoofs and legs of animals and get
transported to other places.
21
Books Recommended

Mehrotra & Aggarwal

V. N. Pathak
22
Two more books
• Plant disease –R.S. Singh-India
• A text book of plant pathology- H.
Ashrafuzzaman-Bangladesh

23
24

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Dispersal of Plant Pathogens

  • 2. DISPERSAL OF PLANT PATHOGENS COURSE NO. PPATH 322 COURSE TITLE: PRINCIPLES OF PLANT PATHOLOGY AND DISEASES OF FIELD CROPS K. M. GOLAM DASTOGEER LECTURER DEPARTMENT OF PLANT PATHOLOGY BANGLADESH AGRICULTURAL UNIVERSITY
  • 3. Topics 1. What is DISSEMINATION of plant pathogens 2. Necessity of dissemination 3. Types of dispersal 4. Modes of pathogen dissemination a. Winds, Water, Human, Birds, Insects, Animals—Indirect b. Seed, plant parts, Soil-----direct 3
  • 4. Dissemination/dispersal/transmission Transport of spores or infectious bodies, acting as inoculum, from one host to another host at various distances resulting in the spread of the disease. or Displacement of a plant pathogen from its place of production or origin to a suitable place where it can grow/establish 4
  • 5. EFFECTIVE DISPERSAL If displacement occurs on a susceptible host and where the environment is suitable, the pathogen can grow and multiply Ineffective Dispersal When plant pathogen does not get any medium for its survival. For example, if it falls on a stone
  • 6. Why Pathogen Disseminate •Food and nutrition •Survival •Complete life cycle •Reproduction 6
  • 8. The dispersal of infectious plant pathogens in space occurs through two ways: Disease 1. Autonomous or direct or active dispersal In this method the dispersal of plant pathogens takes place through soil, seed and planting material during normal agronomic operations. There is no major role of external agencies like insects, wind, water, etc. in this type of dispersal. 2. Indirect or passive dispersal------- insects, wind, water, etc. in this type of dispersal insects, wind, water, Human 8
  • 9. Wind as a means of dispersal Short distance dissemination sporangia of downy mildew fungi, conidia of powdery mildew fungi and basidiospores of rust fungi Long Distance •Uredospores of rust fungi, Chlamydospores of smut fungi and conidia of Alternaria, Helminthosporium and Pyricularia,
  • 10. Wind Wind disseminating fungi Bacteria •Numerous spore •discharge of spores with sufficient force X. malvacearum, Erwinia amylovora • Light in weight Nematode • smaller size Anguina tritici, Heterodera •Thich outer wall •Less affinity to water Virus Vector •19 Viruses and phytoplasmas – •E.g. Most fungi except synchytriaceae, • insect and mite vectors by wind Plasmodiophoromyces, fusarium
  • 11. Factors affecting wind disemination • • • Periodicity of wind – Diurnal – Nocturnal Turbulance in air Air current – Steady-horizontal – Breeze & turbulance-Vertical – Irregular-Multidimensional Record of air velocity and direction tells the direction and distance of spore dispersal and thereby helps to forecast neww disease outbreak is likely to occur 11
  • 12. Some Example: •P.Graminis tritici • Horizontal---600Km • Altitude-------500m above of the infected field •P. Infestans • Horizontal---200m to 600Km •Spores of Molds •Aspergillus •Penicillium •Cladosporium • Altitude----------2000m above
  • 13. International Dispersal From America to Europe ---------------------------Puccinia Striformis From Newzealand to Austrslia--------------------P. Striformis From England to Denmark--------------------------Powdery Mildew of Barely Glass with glycerine Microscope Fig. Spore Trap 13
  • 14. Dispersal by water Surface running water after heavy rains during irrigation: canals and wells Ex: The mycelial fragments, spores or sclerotia of fungi, Colletotrichum falcatum, Fusarium, Ganoderma, Macrophomina, Pythium, Phytophthora, Sclerotium, etc.,  Long distance ------ floods
  • 15. By rain splash ------------splash dispersal • • • • Most efficient meas for bacteria. Rain drops falling with force on sori, pustules, cankers or even soil surface may splash the propagules – in small droplets and enable them to land on neighbouring healthy susceptible surfaces or – the water droplets may be carried to long distances by air. Ex: Bacterial leaf spot of rice (Xanthomonas campestris pv. oryzae), Bacterial leaf streak of rice (Xanthomonas campestris pv. oryzicola) Fungal spores and bacteria present in the air or plant surface are washed downward by rain splash or drops from overhead irrigation and are deposited on susceptible healthy plants. 15
  • 16. 1) Animate agents Insects Fungal pathogens: honey secretions having attractive odours. Ex: Sugary disease of sorghum Bacterial pathogens Cucumber wilt- E. tracheiphila --------stripped cucumber beetles (Acalymma vittata) a---------spotted cucumber beetle (Diabrotica undecimipunctata). Viral pathgens: • More than 80 % of viral and phytoplasmall diseases • Laegest family- Homoptera- Aphids and leaf hoppers • mealy bugs and scale insects (Coccoidae) • whiteflies (Aleurodidae) • hoppers (Membracidae) in Homoptera also transmit virus diseases. •
  • 17. • Mechanical – Fungi-----------------------------Legs – Bacteria--------------------------Bristles – Viruses---------------------------Wings – Mycoplasma--------------------Abdomen • Biological Transmit through sexual process from generation to generation Insect Specificity of Insect Transmission Aphids----------------Mosaic group---------------Tomato mosaic, Papaya mosaic, potato leaf roll, chilli mosaic Leaf Hopper---------Yellows ---------------------------------Tungro of rice Thrips------------------Spots with concentric ring---------Pineaple yellow spots Whiteflies-------------Thickening of veins/veinlets------Tobacco leaf curl, Tomato leaf curl 17
  • 18. e) Human beings- more direct than indirect • • • • • • • Transportation of seeds (seed trade): Ex: Late blight of potato, Downy mildew of grapevine, Citrus canker, Fusarium wilt of banana, etc. Planting diseased seed materials: Planting diseased bulbs, bulbils, corms, tubers, rhizomes, cuttings, etc., of During adoption of normal farming practices: Cultivation, planting, irrigation, weeding, pruning etc., Spores can be carried by workers clothing’s, shoes, and hands etc., By use of contaminated implements: By use of diseased grafting and budding material
  • 19. f) Dispersal by phanerogamic parasites: • Phanerogamic parasites transmit the viruses by acting as a bridge between the diseased and healthy plants. • Ex: Dodder(Cuscuta California, C. campesris, C. subinclusa etc.) • Cuscuta subinclusa----Cucumber mosaic virus • Cuscuta california -----Tobacco mosaic virus, Tobacco rattle virus, Tomato spotted wilt virus • Cuscuta campestris - Tomato bushy stunt virus 19
  • 20. g) Role of birds • Disperse flowering parasites and certain fungi. • Stem segments of dodder are carried by birds for preparing their nests • Seeds of Loranthus • Spores of chestnut blight fungus • Cleistothecia of many powdery mildew fungi are carried by feathers of birds. 20
  • 21. Farm and wild animals: Cattle feeding on diseased fodder ingest the viable fungal propagules (spores or oospores or sclerotia) and pass out as such in the dung. soil inhabiting fungi especially sclerotia adhere to the hoofs and legs of animals and get transported to other places. 21
  • 22. Books Recommended Mehrotra & Aggarwal V. N. Pathak 22
  • 23. Two more books • Plant disease –R.S. Singh-India • A text book of plant pathology- H. Ashrafuzzaman-Bangladesh 23
  • 24. 24

Editor's Notes

  1. {"11":"What will the audience be able to do after this training is complete? Briefly describe each objective how the audience will benefit from this presentation.\n","12":"Use a section header for each of the topics, so there is a clear transition to the audience. \n","1":"This template can be used as a starter file for presenting training materials in a group setting.\nSections\nRight-click on a slide to add sections. Sections can help to organize your slides or facilitate collaboration between multiple authors.\nNotes\nUse the Notes section for delivery notes or to provide additional details for the audience. View these notes in Presentation View during your presentation. \nKeep in mind the font size (important for accessibility, visibility, videotaping, and online production)\nCoordinated colors \nPay particular attention to the graphs, charts, and text boxes. \nConsider that attendees will print in black and white or grayscale. Run a test print to make sure your colors work when printed in pure black and white and grayscale.\nGraphics, tables, and graphs\nKeep it simple: If possible, use consistent, non-distracting styles and colors.\nLabel all graphs and tables.\n","7":"Give a brief overview of the presentation. Describe the major focus of the presentation and why it is important.\nIntroduce each of the major topics.\nTo provide a road map for the audience, you can repeat this Overview slide throughout the presentation, highlighting the particular topic you will discuss next.\n","24":"Is your presentation as crisp as possible? Consider moving extra content to the appendix.\nUse appendix slides to store content that you might want to refer to during the Question slide or that may be useful for attendees to investigate deeper in the future.\n","13":"Add slides to each topic section as necessary, including slides with tables, graphs, and images. \nSee next section for sample table, graph, image, and video layouts. \n","2":"This template can be used as a starter file for presenting training materials in a group setting.\nSections\nRight-click on a slide to add sections. Sections can help to organize your slides or facilitate collaboration between multiple authors.\nNotes\nUse the Notes section for delivery notes or to provide additional details for the audience. View these notes in Presentation View during your presentation. \nKeep in mind the font size (important for accessibility, visibility, videotaping, and online production)\nCoordinated colors \nPay particular attention to the graphs, charts, and text boxes. \nConsider that attendees will print in black and white or grayscale. Run a test print to make sure your colors work when printed in pure black and white and grayscale.\nGraphics, tables, and graphs\nKeep it simple: If possible, use consistent, non-distracting styles and colors.\nLabel all graphs and tables.\n","10":"This is another option for an Overview slide.\n"}