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Plant Physiol, October 1999, Vol. 121, pp. 565-570

Induced Resistance to Pathogenic Fungi in Norway Spruce1

Paal Krokene,* Erik Christiansen, Halvor Solheim, Vincent Ray Franceschi, and Alan Andrew Berryman

Norwegian Forest Research Institute, Ås, Norway N-1432 (P.K., E.C., H.S.); and Washington State University, Pullman, Washington 99164 (V.R.F., A.A.B.)

Norway spruce (Picea abies) trees (approximately 16 m high) of a single clone were used to study the effects of fungal infection and wounding on induction of resistance to the bark beetle-associated bluestain fungus Ceratocystis polonica. A dose-response experiment was designed involving three different dosages of fungal (fungus and wound) and sterile agar (wound) pretreatment inoculations (10, 50, or 100 inoculations/m2 on the stem between 0.8 and 2.0 m high). Three weeks after pretreatment, trees were challenged with a massive C. polonica inoculation (400 inoculations/m2). Control trees that received no pretreatment were heavily colonized and killed by the challenge inoculation. The high and medium fungal pretreatments reduced subsequent fungal colonization success by 76% to 97% relative to the control, and fungal pretreatments protected the trees much more efficiently than sterile agar pretreatments. The protection was demonstrated to be local and not systemic in a subsequent experiment, where trees were pretreated with the medium fungal dosage on the lower bole and challenge inoculated further up the stem. Protection was also demonstrated to be pathogen nonspecific, as trees that had been pretreated with a medium dosage of the root rot fungus Heterobasidion annosum showed enhanced resistance to challenge inoculation with C. polonica.


1 This work was supported by the Norwegian Research Council (grant no. 104023/110) and the Norwegian Forest Research Institute.

* Corresponding author; e-mail paal.krokene{at}nisk.no; fax 47-64-942980.

© 1999 American Society of Plant Physiologists



This article has been cited by other articles:


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V. R. Franceschi, T. Krekling, and E. Christiansen
Application of methyl jasmonate on Picea abies (Pinaceae) stems induces defense-related responses in phloem and xylem
Am. J. Botany, April 1, 2002; 89(4): 578 - 586.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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