1993
DOI: 10.1094/phyto-83-509
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Sclerotial Survival and Apothecial Production bySclerotinia sclerotiorumFollowing Outbreaks of Lettuce Drop

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Cited by 44 publications
(24 citation statements)
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“…The sclerotial rind is composed of a layer of dark-walled globose cells two to six cells thick. S. sclerotiorum can survive in soil as sclerotia for up to 10 years (Ben-Yephet et al, 1993). Occasionally, it also may survive as active mycelium in living or dead plants.…”
Section: Cottony Rotmentioning
confidence: 76%
“…The sclerotial rind is composed of a layer of dark-walled globose cells two to six cells thick. S. sclerotiorum can survive in soil as sclerotia for up to 10 years (Ben-Yephet et al, 1993). Occasionally, it also may survive as active mycelium in living or dead plants.…”
Section: Cottony Rotmentioning
confidence: 76%
“…They studied fields where S. sclerotiorum caused lettuce drop and found that 31% of sclerotia heavier than 14 mg produced apothecia, with nearly one-half of those producing multiple apothecia. Lighter sclerotia produced fewer apothecia but were recovered in a greater proportion several years after the outbreak of lettuce drop (Ben-Yephet et al 1993). In our study, the mean mass of sclerotia was at least 14 mg for all isolates tested on celery and up to 90 mg for isolate H on carrot, which suggests that apothecia production is likely.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 42%
“…The mass of sclerotia can influence the type of germination and length of survival. Ben-Yephet et al (1993) reported that heavier sclerotia more often germinate carpogenically to produce apothecia. They studied fields where S. sclerotiorum caused lettuce drop and found that 31% of sclerotia heavier than 14 mg produced apothecia, with nearly one-half of those producing multiple apothecia.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Other researchers also demonstrated that, in vitro , different isolates of both S. sclerotiorum and S. trifoliorum produced different numbers and weights of sclerotia under the same conditions (Akram et al ., ; Li et al ., ; Vleugels et al ., ). Furthermore, it has been shown that larger S. sclerotiorum sclerotia tend to produce more apothecia than smaller ones and are also more likely to germinate (Ben‐Yephet et al ., ; Dillard et al ., ; Hao et al ., ; Warmington & Clarkson, ). However, these studies used sclerotia produced on a single crop type (lettuce; Ben‐Yephet et al ., ), or on detached potato tubers (Hao et al ., ) or produced artificially in vitro (Dillard et al ., ; Warmington & Clarkson, ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 98%