Abstract: | A technique is described for testing isolates of Septoria tritici from winter wheat for resistance to benzimidazole fungicides. Secondary spores from 23 isolates were tested on Czapek Dox V-8 agar amended with benomyl at 1–10 μg ml. Twenty-one isolates were recovered from eight crops in England in 1984 and two (PBI isolates) were obtained in 1973. Thirteen isolates, including both PBI isolates, were sensitive to benomyl at 1 μg ml?1 and nine were resistant at 10 μg ml?1. The remaining isolate had a low proportion (1:3.7 x 104) of resistant spores. The minimum inhibitory concentration for sensitive isolates was 0.2–0.4 μg ml 1 benomyl and for resistant isolates was more than 1000 μg ml 1. Benomyl-resistant isolates were cross-resistant to carbendazim, thiabendazole and thiophanate-methyl, but not to 12 other fungicides with different modes of action. The implications of these findings are discussed. |