“…They act as substrates for the attachment of colonizing organisms to the leaf surface (Clement et al, 1994;Tucker and Talbot, 2001), and they also play crucial roles in plant-pathogen and plant-pest signaling (Kolattukudy et al, 1995;Chassot and Métraux, 2005;Reina-Pinto and Yephremov, 2009). It is well established that some wax components, such as triterpenoids and aldehydes, are important in pre-invasion processes, including spore germination and appressorium formation, in different plant species (Podila et al, 1993;Gniwotta et al, 2005;Reisige et al, 2006;Inada and Savory, 2011). Inada and Savory (Inada and Savory, 2011) recently demonstrated in Arabidopsis that pre-penetration processes in the biotrophic fungus Golovinomyces orontii were suppressed on cauline leaves, stems, siliques and roots compared to rosette leaves.…”