2017
DOI: 10.17660/actahortic.2017.1178.28
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Growth response of the cape gooseberry (Physalis peruvianaL.) to waterlogging stress andFusarium oxysporuminfection

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Cited by 12 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…Therefore, the interaction between waterlogging and the presence of Foph caused a lower plant growth (LA, FDW and stem diameter) in this study, which was mainly observed at 53 DAI. Villarreal-Navarrete et al [6] also observed a decrease of 57.3% in the values of the stem diameter and 42.1% in LA values in cape gooseberry plants with 6 d of waterlogging and inoculated with FO compared to control plants. Suzuki et al [79] reported that the interaction between abiotic and biotic (pathogen) stresses can also generate alterations in physiological traits such as photosynthetic activity (photosystems efficiency or rubisco enzyme activity), hormonal signaling or nutritional status.…”
Section: Biochemical Tests On Leaves (Malondialdehyde Content Photosmentioning
confidence: 84%
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“…Therefore, the interaction between waterlogging and the presence of Foph caused a lower plant growth (LA, FDW and stem diameter) in this study, which was mainly observed at 53 DAI. Villarreal-Navarrete et al [6] also observed a decrease of 57.3% in the values of the stem diameter and 42.1% in LA values in cape gooseberry plants with 6 d of waterlogging and inoculated with FO compared to control plants. Suzuki et al [79] reported that the interaction between abiotic and biotic (pathogen) stresses can also generate alterations in physiological traits such as photosynthetic activity (photosystems efficiency or rubisco enzyme activity), hormonal signaling or nutritional status.…”
Section: Biochemical Tests On Leaves (Malondialdehyde Content Photosmentioning
confidence: 84%
“…Flooding and soil-borne diseases can cause severe crop losses of tomato during the hot and wet summer months in the tropics [52]. Villarreal-Navarrete et al [6] also observed a greater progress of vascular wilt caused by FO in cape gooseberry under waterlogging conditions. Furthermore, these authors reported a reduction in dry matter accumulation, root length, leaf area, plant height and dry matter distribution under the same conditions mentioned above.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 96%
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“…For pathogen inoculation, conidia multiplication was performed by adding disks of Potato Dextrose Agar (PDA) culture medium with fungal mycelium to malt extract liquid medium under constant agitation (125 rpm) in a shaker (Innova 2000, New Brunswick, NJ, United States) and in a dark room at 25 • C for 7 days. Then, a suspension of 1 × 10 6 conidia mL −1 in sterile distilled water was adjusted (Villarreal-Navarrete et al, 2017;Chávez-Arias et al, 2019). The inoculation process was carried out 51 days after sowing (DAS) following the technique described by Lopez-Benitez et al 2018with modifications by dipping the roots of each of the previously washed plants in 300 ml of the conidial suspension for 3 min.…”
Section: Treatment Setupmentioning
confidence: 99%