The cultivation of aerobic rice in the tropics enables farmers to save water without lowering productivity. Unfortunately, this system suffers from declining yields due to a disease complex involving nematodes, pathogenic Pythium spp. and nutrient deficiencies. Assessing the impact of each underlying factor can contribute to efficient disease control measures. This study therefore investigated pathogenic and genotypic variability among Pythium species from affected aerobic rice fields in the Philippines using pathogenicity assays and sequence information from the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region and b-tubulin gene. Three closely related Pythium spp., P. arrhenomanes, P. graminicola and P. inflatum, were recovered from affected aerobic rice fields. All P. arrhenomanes isolates reduced rice seedling growth, whereas only a few P. graminicola isolates and no P. inflatum isolates were pathogenic, indicating that P. arrhenomanes is probably the most important species affecting rice. Both P. arrhenomanes and P. graminicola isolates showed little genetic variation, despite the observed pathogenic variation within P. graminicola. Intraspecific variation was higher among P. inflatum isolates, but again no correlation was observed with phenotype. When screening P. arrhenomanes isolates from other hosts such as sugarcane, maize and several grasses, a link between pathogenic and genetic variability was detected. However, rice and maize isolates seemed to lack host specificity, and therefore crop rotation with maize might be a risky strategy to manage yield decline in Philippine aerobic rice fields.
Background: Aerobic rice fields are frequently infested by pathogenic oomycetes (Pythium spp.) and the rice rootknot nematode Meloidogyne graminicola. Here, the interaction between Pythium arrhenomanes and Meloidogyne graminicola was studied in rice roots of two aerobic rice varieties. In different experimental set-ups and infection regimes, plant growth, rice yield, Pythium colonization, as well as establishment, development and reproduction of M. graminicola were studied.
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