AO Claudius-Cole1*, EJA Ekpo1and AMC Schilder 2
Department of Crop Protection and Environmental Biology, University of Ibadan, Nigeria.
Abstrsact
The detection of cowpea bacterial blight in seed lots of cowpea (Vigna uniguiculata) is important for developing management options. Cowpea seeds were collected from five locations within two agro ecological regions in Nigeria. Various modifications to the plating and soaking methods were adopted to evaluate extraction of bacteria from seeds and selected isolates from the seed lots were subjected to various pathogenicity tests with the objective of find out the best method of detecting the cowpea bacterial blight pathogens in seed lots. All seed assay experiments and pathogenicity tests were laid out in a completely randomized design (CRD) with three replications. Percentage seed infection was significantly higher in Zaria, Minjibir (northern guinea savannah) and Iseyin (forest transition zone) compared to the other production locations in both plating and washing assay methods. The seed coat alone was the most (p=0.05) colonized part of the seed by the pathogen followed by the cotyledons while embryo was the least colonized. Pod inoculation was the most effective pathogenicity test followed by inoculation of young plants, while inoculation of the excised cotyledons, stems and petioles were not reliable in expressing symptoms. Detection of Xanthomonas axonopodis pv vignicola (Xav) is better made with methods that breach the seed coat or using the seed coat alone. Detached pods are just as efficient and takes less time to get results compared to inoculation of young plants for determining pathogenicity of Xav isolates.
Key words:Disease detection, Pathogenicity, Seed-borne diseases, Vigna, Xanthomonas
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