Technological advances and increasing availability of high-resolution satellite imagery offer the potential for more accurate land cover classifications and pattern analyses, which could greatly improve the detection and quantification of land cover change for conservation. Such remotely-sensed products, however, are often expensive and difficult to acquire, which prohibits or reduces their use. We tested whether imagery of high spatial resolution (≤5 m) differs from lower-resolution imagery (≥30 m) in performance and extent of use for conservation applications. To assess performance, we classified land cover in a heterogeneous region of Interior Atlantic Forest in Paraguay, which has undergone recent and dramatic human-induced habitat loss and fragmentation. We used 4 m multispectral IKONOS and 30 m multispectral Landsat imagery and determined the extent to which resolution influenced the delineation of land cover classes and patch-level metrics. Higher-resolution imagery more accurately delineated cover classes, identified smaller patches, retained patch shape, and detected narrower, linear patches. To assess extent of use, we surveyed three conservation journals (Biological Conservation, Biotropica, Conservation Biology) and found limited application of high-resolution imagery in research, with only 26.8% of land cover studies analyzing satellite imagery, and of these studies only 10.4% used imagery ≤5 m resolution. Our results suggest that high-resolution imagery is warranted yet under-utilized in conservation research, but is needed to adequately monitor and evaluate forest loss and conversion, and to delineate potentially important stepping-stone fragments that may serve as corridors in a human-modified landscape. Greater access to low-cost, multiband, high-resolution satellite imagery would therefore greatly facilitate conservation management and decision-making.
Wheat blast disease, caused by Magnaporthe oryzae (anamorph Pyricularia oryzae), produces severe damage to wheat production in South America. It was observed that many resistant cultivars contain the 2NS/2AS translocation from Triticum ventricosum. In this study, we evaluate the presence of the 2NS/2AS translocation in 57 advanced breeding lines and one variety ‘Caninde 1’ from Paraguayan wheat germplasm, using VENTRIUP‐LN2 primers. The germplasm ‘Caninde 1 and 22’ of the breeding lines, found positive for the presence of 2NS/2AS translocation, were inoculated with a single aggressive Magnaporthe pathotype P14‐039, to assess their response to wheat blast infection under controlled conditions. Based on the disease infection score, ten of the breeding lines, ‘Caninde 1’ and ‘Milan’ (positive control), were classified as resistant. Three of the remaining breeding lines were classified as moderately resistant, five as moderately susceptible and other four as susceptible. Our results show that the expression of 2NS/2AS‐based blast resistance is more dependent on genetic background of the inserted germplasm than previously envisioned.
Fusarium head blight (FHB), or scab, caused by a Fusarium spp. complex, is an important wheat disease in Paraguay. Among the strategies used to control it, the genetic resistance is considered highly efficient and cost effective. This study aimed to evaluate and compare the effects of F. graminearum on six wheat genotypes, including two comparison varieties, in two seeding dates. The genotypes were artificially inoculated in the spike, at the flowering stage, by injecting a pool of four pathogenic F. graminearum isolates. The FHB development was evaluated by scoring the disease incidence and severity, percentage of diseased spikelets and damaged kernels, as well as using the area under the disease progress curve. Besides the kernel infection, its impact on the development of mycotoxins (deoxynivalenol) and interactions with the genotypes were also evaluated. The results identified an advanced breeding line (Lin 84) with a resistance level to FHB comparable to that of the universally known resistance sources (Sumai 3 and Frontana). The other three genotypes (Caninde 11, Caninde 12 and Caninde 21), in spite of presenting a higher grain yield potential, were evaluated as moderately susceptible to susceptible. These results suggest that, although it is possible to transfer the FHB resistance to a higher agronomic type, combining such resistance with a higher grain yield potential remains an ongoing challenge.
The genus Pyricularia contains several fungal species known to cause diseases on plants in the Poaceae family (Klaubauf et al. 2014; Wang et al. 2019). While sampling for P. oryzae during March-2015 and April-2018, common weed Cenchrus echinatus L. was observed with leaf lesions in and around experimental wheat fields in the departments of Canindeyú and Itapúa. C. echinatus samples from both locations displayed similar leaf lesions, varying from small light brown pinpoint to elliptical brown lesions with greyish center. Symptomatic leaves were surface disinfested and cultured on potato dextrose agar (PDA) amended with 1% gentamicin at 25°C. Two monosporic isolates were obtained, one from Itapúa (ITCeh117) and the other from Canindeyú (YCeh55). The isolates were subsequently grown on oatmeal agar (OA) and PDA under a 12-h photoperiod at 25°C and evaluated after ten days for colony diameter, sporulation, macroscopic and microscopic features. Colonies on OA reached up to 4.8 cm diameter and were light grey, whereas colonies on PDA reached up to 5.3 cm diameter and were brown with grey centers, with cottony mycelium and broad white rims. Mycelium consisted of smooth, hyaline, branched, septate hyphae 4-4.5 µm diameter. Conidiophores were erect, straight or curved, unbranched, medium brown and smooth. Conidia were solitary, pyriform, pale brown, smooth, granular, 2-septate, 32-33 × 9-10 μm; truncated with protruding hilum and varied in length from 1.0 to 1.5 μm and diameters from 2.0 to 2.2 μm. Both isolates were similar and identified as Pyricularia pennisetigena, according to morphological and morphometric characteristics (Klaubauf et al. 2014). Subsequently, genomic DNA was extracted from each isolate using the primers described in Klaubauf et al. (2014) to amplify and sequence the internal transcribed spacers (ITS), partial large subunit (LSU), partial RNA polymerase II large subunit gene (RPB1), partial actin gene (ACT), and partial calmodulin gene (CAL). Sequences from each isolate (YCeh55/ITCeh117) were deposited in GenBank with the following submission ID for ITS: MN947521/MN947526, RPB1: MN984710/MN984715, LSU: MN944829/MN944834, ACT: MN917177/MN917182, and CAL: MN984688/MN984693. Phylogenetic analysis was conducted using the software Beast v1.10.4. The results obtained from the concatenated matrix of the five loci placed these isolates in the P. pennisetigena clade. To confirm pathogenicity, each isolate was adjusted to 5×104 conidia/ml of sterile water and C. echinatus plants were sprayed with the conidial suspension for isolate YCeh55, ITCeh117 or sterile water using an oilless airbrush sprayer until runoff. The three treatments were kept in the greenhouse at 25-28°C and about 75% relative humidity under natural daylight. Each treatment included three to five inoculated plants and 10 leaves were evaluated per treatment. Symptoms were observed 8-15 days after inoculation and were similar to those originally observed in the field for both isolates, whereas the control plants remained asymptomatic. P. pennisetigena was re-isolated from the inoculated leaves fulfilling Koch’s postulates. To our knowledge, this is the first report of leaf blight on C. echinatus caused by P. pennisetigena in Paraguay. The occurrence of P. pennisetigena in the region and its ability to infect economically important crops such as wheat and barley (Klaubauf et al. 2014; Reges et al., 2016, 2018) pose a potential threat to agriculture in Paraguay.
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