2011
DOI: 10.17221/3267-cjgpb
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Pyricularia blast - a threat to wheat cultivation

Abstract: Wheat blast disease caused by Pyricularia grisea (telemorph Magnaporthe grisea) has become a serious restriction on increasing the area and production of the crop, especially in the tropical parts of the Southern Cone Region of South America. First identified in 1985 in the State of Paraná in Brazil, it has become an endemic disease in the low lying Santa Cruz region of Bolivia, south and south-eastern Paraguay, and central and southern Brazil in recent years. Severe infections have also been observed in the s… Show more

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Cited by 169 publications
(192 citation statements)
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“…The wet years; warm temperatures and high humidity were found associated with wheat blast epidemics (Kohli et al, 2011). The rains for several days and average temperatures ranging from 18-25°C during flowering, followed by sunny, hot, humid days is favourable for the epidemic of the wheat blast.…”
Section: Favourable Climatementioning
confidence: 99%
“…The wet years; warm temperatures and high humidity were found associated with wheat blast epidemics (Kohli et al, 2011). The rains for several days and average temperatures ranging from 18-25°C during flowering, followed by sunny, hot, humid days is favourable for the epidemic of the wheat blast.…”
Section: Favourable Climatementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Rice (Oryza sativa L.) and wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) are the most important staple crops produced worldwide (Kohli et al, 2011;Talbot, 2003). The fungus Magnaporthe oryzae (asexual phase Pyricularia oryzae) is the causal agent of blast disease on gramineous plants and poses a threat to world food security (Kohli et al, 2011;Talbot, 2003;Tosa et al, 2006;Valent and Chumley, 1991).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The fungus Magnaporthe oryzae (asexual phase Pyricularia oryzae) is the causal agent of blast disease on gramineous plants and poses a threat to world food security (Kohli et al, 2011;Talbot, 2003;Tosa et al, 2006;Valent and Chumley, 1991).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Ever since its first report, blast pathogen was variously named by researchers for example, Pyricularia oryzae Oliveira et al, 2015;Cruz et al, 2015a;Silva et al, 2015), Pyricularia grisea (Filha et al, 2011;Kohli et al, 2011;Rocha et al, 2014), Magnaporthe grisea (Urashima and Kato, 1994;Peng et al, 2011;Pagani et al, 2014) and M. oryzae Triticum (Cruz et al, 2015a). Blast pathogen has shown capability to evolve fast to adapt to new climates.…”
Section: Pathogen Disease Development and Host Variationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…First detected in Brazil in 1985, wheat blast soon spread to other neighbouring countries like Bolivia, Paraguay (Kohli et al, 2011) and was detected in Argentina in 2012 (Perello et al, 2015). The blast causing fungal pathogen M. oryzae can spread through seed and can also survive on crop residues.…”
Section: Epidemiology Distribution and Quantificationmentioning
confidence: 99%