Diversidade de Fusarium spp. causadores de podridão radicular do feijoeiro comum
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Universidade Federal de Goiás
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Ninety-six Fusarium isolates retrieved from soil samples collected in the
Brazilian states of Paraná, Minas Gerais, São Paulo and Goiás were investigated, in order
to identify the species complex that causes root rots in common bean. The first study
consisted of pathogenicity tests and identification at the species level of 24 isolates from
each state, which comprise the main growers of this crop in Brazil. Root infection was
assessed by the inoculum layer method, in a completely randomized design with five
replications. In addition to disease incidence, root rot severity was estimated according to a
disease rating scale and McKinney index. Statistical analysis consisted of Shapiro-Wilk
test, analysis of variance, and mean separation by Scott-Knott test, both of them at 5% of
significance. All isolates caused root rot symptoms in common bean seedlings, with two
different groups of disease severity. The species identification was carried out in carnation
leaf-agar medium and optical microscopy, and by sequencing of the Tef-1α gene. Sixty five isolates were identified as Fusarium solani, 27 as F. oxysporum and three as F.
proliferatum, according to morphological descriptors and DNA similarity above 95%, in
comparison to reference sequences deposited in GenBank and Fusarium-ID database. The
distribution of species and disease severity of were not linked to the geographical origin of
the isolates. A second study aimed to estimate the physiological diversity of F. solani and
F. oxysporum isolates according to the assimilation profile of 95 different carbon sources,
assessed in FF Biolog microplates. Each Fusarium isolate was evaluated in duplicate, with
100 l of a suspension of 2 x 105
conidia ml-1
adjusted in phytagel sterile solution
deposited in each microplate well. Each isolate was evaluated in duplicate, after 72 hours
of incubation in the dark at 25°C, with absorbance assessed at 750 nm. This test followed a
completely randomized design, with a 2 × 4 × 95 factorial arrangement, for evaluation of
individual factors (species, isolate origin state and C source) and their interactions. The
results were submitted to analysis of variance, with averages compared by Scott-Knott test
(5%). Metabolism of C sources was also analyzed by descriptive statistics and by principal
component analysis, to identify the main causes of variation and correlation between
variables. The results showed differences between the metabolic profile of F. solani and F.
oxysporum and between the geographical origin of the samples, with isolates from Goiás
forming a clearly distinct population from the other states.Therefore, it was found that
100% of the isolates were pathogenic to common bean, and that the three species (F.
solani, F. oxysporum and F. proliferatum) form a pathogen complex distributed in
different Brazilian states. The physiological differences between F. solani and F.
oxysporum suggest that these species may inhabit different soil niches, and that carbon
sources assimilation profile can be used to identify species and populations adapted to
different environmental conditions.
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ABUD, Lidianne Lemes Silva. Diversidade de Fusarium spp. causadores de podridão radicular do feijoeiro comum. Orientador: Murillo Lobo Junior. 2015. 87 f. Dissertação (Mestrado em Agronomia) - Escola de Agronomia, Universidade Federal de Goiás, Goiânia, 2015.