Affiliation: | (1) Dept. of Botany, Faculty of Science, University of Khartoum, Sudan;(2) Present address: Dept. of Plant Sciences, The University of Western Ontario, N6A 2E9 London, ON, Canada |
Abstract: | In the course of pre- and postharvest epidemiological studies on bulbs contamination byAspergillus niger, two Sudanese onion cultivars were tested: ‘Saggai Red’ and ‘El-Hilo White’.A. niger spores, whether seedborne, soilborne or airborne, were avirulent to the healthy growing onion plants. The fungus heavily contaminated the dead onion tissues, mainly the dead leaves followed by the dry scales, the dead roots and, to a lesser extent, the bulb necks, preferring the red-skinned cultivar to the white one. The initial spores carried from naturally contaminated field soil on the dead tissues could germinate and produce massive numbers of new spores on bulbs stored at average climatic conditions of Sudan (23–39°C, 29–93% relative humidity). Under laboratory-controlled conditions, optimal growth occurred at 75–85% r.h. on bulbs with dry scales and maximum losses occurred at 100% r.h. and ambient temperature. Underin vitro conditions, the optimal growth and sporulation temperature forA. niger was in the range of 30–35°C. Early harvesting and removal of the dead onion tissues improved bulb storability in aseptic stores under low temperature and relative humidity conditions. http://www.phytoparasitica.org posting Oct. 20, 2003. |