The Effect of "Orobanche crenata" infection severity in faba bean, field pea, and grass pea productivity
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Abstract
Broomrape weeds (Orobanche and Phelipanche spp.) are root holoparasites that feed
off a wide range of important crops. Among them, Orobanche crenata attacks legumes
complicating their inclusion in cropping systems along the Mediterranean area and West
Asia. The detrimental effect of broomrape parasitism in crop yield can reach up to 100%
depending on infection severity and the broomrape-crop association. This work provides
field data of the consequences of O. crenata infection severity in three legume crops,
i.e., faba bean, field pea, and grass pea. Regression functions modeled productivity
losses and revealed trends in dry matter allocation in relation to infection severity.
The host species differentially limits parasitic sink strength indicating different levels of
broomrape tolerance at equivalent infection severities. Reductions in host aboveground
biomass were observed starting at low infection severity and half maximal inhibitory
performance was predicted as 4.5, 8.2, and 1.5 parasites per faba bean, field pea, and
grass pea plant, respectively. Reductions in host biomass occurred in both vegetative
and reproductive organs, the latter resulting more affected. The increase of resources
allocated within the parasite was concomitant to reduction of host seed yield indicating
that parasite growth and host reproduction compete directly for resources within a host
plant. However, the parasitic sink activity does not fully explain the total host biomass
reduction because combined biomass of host–parasite complex was lower than the
biomass of uninfected plants. In grass pea, the seed yield was negligible at severities
higher than four parasites per plant. In contrast, faba bean and field pea sustained
low but significant seed production at the highest infection severity. Data on seed yield
and seed number indicated that the sensitivity of field pea to O. crenata limited the
production of grain yield by reducing seed number but maintaining seed size. In contrast,
the size of individual parasites was not genetically determined but dependent on the host
species and resource availability as a consequence of competition between parasites at
increasing infection severities. [This Document is Protected by copyright and was first published by Frontiers. All rights reserved. it is reproduced with permission.]
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Bibliographic citation
Fernández Aparicio, M., Flores Gil, F., Rubiales, D.: "The Effect of "Orobanche crenata" infection severity in faba bean, field pea, and grass pea productivity". Frontiers in Plant Science. Vol. 7, art. 1409, (2016). DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2016.01409











