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Genetic Variability Among Isolates Of Fusarium Oxysporum From Sugar Beet, A. L. Hill, P. A. Reeves, R. L. Larson, A. L. Fenwick, L. E. Hanson, L. Panella
Genetic Variability Among Isolates Of Fusarium Oxysporum From Sugar Beet, A. L. Hill, P. A. Reeves, R. L. Larson, A. L. Fenwick, L. E. Hanson, L. Panella
United States Department of Agriculture-Agricultural Research Service / University of Nebraska-Lincoln: Faculty Publications
Fusarium yellows, caused by the soil-borne fungus Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. betae (Fob), can lead to significant yield losses in sugar beet. This fungus is variable in pathogenicity, morphology, host range and symptom production, and is not a well characterized pathogen on sugar beet. From 1998 to 2003, 86 isolates of F. oxysporum and 20 other Fusarium species from sugar beet, along with four F. oxysporum isolates from dry bean and five from spinach, were obtained from diseased plants and characterized for pathogenicity to sugar beet. A group of sugar beet Fusarium isolates from different geographic areas (including nonpathogenic and …