2014
DOI: 10.1094/pdis-06-13-0680-re
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Distribution of Xylella fastidiosa in Blueberry Stem and Root Sections in Relation to Disease Severity in the Field

Abstract: Holland, R. M., Christiano, R. S. C, Gamliel-Atinsky, E., and Scherni. H. 2014. Distribution of Xylella fastidiosa in blueberry stem and root sections in relation to disease severity in the field. Plant

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Cited by 27 publications
(20 citation statements)
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“…Our experiments are the first to document that internal movement of E. tracheiphila 248 following infection is more rapid in a downward than upward direction. In common with other 249 xylem-limited vascular wilt diseases, symptom expression as indicated by visible wilt progressed 250 distally beyond the nodes from which the pathogen was recovered, presumably as sieve plates 251 became blocked and water flow ceased (Holland et al 2014, McElrone et al 2003. Such a 252 blockage of the upward movement of water inside the vascular system may help to explain our 253 observation that E. tracheiphila moved in a primarily downward rather than upward direction 254 from the inoculation point.…”
mentioning
confidence: 79%
“…Our experiments are the first to document that internal movement of E. tracheiphila 248 following infection is more rapid in a downward than upward direction. In common with other 249 xylem-limited vascular wilt diseases, symptom expression as indicated by visible wilt progressed 250 distally beyond the nodes from which the pathogen was recovered, presumably as sieve plates 251 became blocked and water flow ceased (Holland et al 2014, McElrone et al 2003. Such a 252 blockage of the upward movement of water inside the vascular system may help to explain our 253 observation that E. tracheiphila moved in a primarily downward rather than upward direction 254 from the inoculation point.…”
mentioning
confidence: 79%
“…As X. fastidiosa is confined to the xylem tissue of its hosts, the petiole and midrib recovered from leaf samples are the best source for diagnosis as they contain a higher number of xylem vessels (Hopkins, ). However, other sources of tissue include small twigs and roots of peach (Aldrich et al ., ), blueberry stem and roots (Holland et al ., ) and citrus fruit peduncles (Rossetti et al ., ).…”
Section: Detectionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This is because of the difficulties in identifying early X. fastidiosa plant infections and of the rapid translocation of the bacteria to the roots. While symptomatic plant parts are removed by pruning, bacterial concentrations are not reduced significantly (Holland et al, 2014). On the contrary, new growth from flushing buds is likely to be readily invaded by X. fastidiosa and attract vector insects for bacteria acquisition (Marucci et al, 2004).…”
Section: Fastidiosamentioning
confidence: 99%