1997
DOI: 10.1094/pdis.1997.81.10.1100
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Sudden Death Syndrome of Soybean

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Cited by 188 publications
(185 citation statements)
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“…Detailed field research will be necessary to understand the relationships between strain A detected in E. variegata and the fungal symbionts of ambrosia beetles. F. virguliforme, a member of the FSSC clade 2, is known to cause sudden death syndrome in the soybean Glycine max (Roy et al 1997), which belongs to the same family, Fabaceae, as Erythrina. Several reports indicate similarities between the symptoms of soybean SDS and those of Erythrina decline, such as the discoloration of stem tissue and tissue necrosis (Aoki et al 2003(Aoki et al , 2014Roy et al 1997).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Detailed field research will be necessary to understand the relationships between strain A detected in E. variegata and the fungal symbionts of ambrosia beetles. F. virguliforme, a member of the FSSC clade 2, is known to cause sudden death syndrome in the soybean Glycine max (Roy et al 1997), which belongs to the same family, Fabaceae, as Erythrina. Several reports indicate similarities between the symptoms of soybean SDS and those of Erythrina decline, such as the discoloration of stem tissue and tissue necrosis (Aoki et al 2003(Aoki et al , 2014Roy et al 1997).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…F. virguliforme, a member of the FSSC clade 2, is known to cause sudden death syndrome in the soybean Glycine max (Roy et al 1997), which belongs to the same family, Fabaceae, as Erythrina. Several reports indicate similarities between the symptoms of soybean SDS and those of Erythrina decline, such as the discoloration of stem tissue and tissue necrosis (Aoki et al 2003(Aoki et al , 2014Roy et al 1997). Note that the causal agent of SDS was confirmed only after a long history of investigation because experimental demonstration was difficult (Radwan et al 2011).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The disease was first observed by H.J. Walters in Arkansas in 1971 [1], but it was only in 1983 that the disease was named as sudden death syndrome (SDS) of unknown etiology [2]. Since then, the disease has been reported in 21 U.S. states where corn and soybean are grown, as well as in seven other countries (Shrishail S. Navi, Lan Jing and Xiao-Bing Yang, unpublished), the most recent of SDS has been in South Dakota [3] and South Africa [4].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…SCN causes plant and root stunting and leaf chlorosis. Sudden death syndrome (SDS) has been shown to be a facultative hemibiotrophic fungus (Li, 2009;Roy, 1997) that causes yield loss in soybean. The amount of loss has doubled every decade in the US, since 1990 (Wrather, 2001;Lightfoot, 2015).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%