First occurrence of resistance to strobilurin fungicides in Microdochium nivale and Microdochium majus from naturally infected wheat grains
Stuttgart, Germany
July 2009
Microdochium nivale (Fr.) Samuels & Hallet and Microdochium majus (Wollenweber) belong to the Fusarium ear blight fungal complex affecting cereals. In 2007 and 2008, major Microdochium sp. infestations were observed in France, and the efficacy of strobilurins was found to be altered in some field trials.
Half of the strains collected in 2007 were resistant to strobilurins, and most also displayed strong resistance to benzimidazoles. Strobilurin resistance was found mostly in M. majus isolates. Positive cross-resistance was observed between all strobilurins tested, but not with the phenylpyrrole derivative fludioxonil and the various classes of sterol biosynthesis inhibitors. In most strains, resistance was correlated with the G143A substitution in cytochrome b, the molecular target of strobilurins. Two other mechanisms were also detected at lower frequencies (Walker and coworkers (2009), published in Pest Managment Science 65(8), 906-915).
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