Journal of Fungi (Aug 2021)

Banana Cultivar Field Screening for Resistance to <i>Fusarium oxysporum</i> f.sp. <i>cubense</i> Tropical Race 4 in the Northern Territory

  • Sharl J. L. Mintoff,
  • Tuan V. Nguyen,
  • Chris Kelly,
  • Samantha Cullen,
  • Mark Hearnden,
  • Robert Williams,
  • Jeffrey W. Daniells,
  • Lucy T. T. Tran-Nguyen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jof7080627
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 8
p. 627

Abstract

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Fusarium oxysporum f.sp. cubense, causal agent of Panama disease, is one of the biggest threats to global banana production, particularly the Cavendish competent tropical race 4 (Foc TR4). It continues to spread globally with detections occurring in regions of the Middle East and new continents such as Africa and South America in the last decade. As the search was on for new management strategies and resistant cultivars to combat the disease, a banana cultivar-screening trial took place in the Northern Territory of Australia, which examined the responses of 24 banana cultivars to the soil borne fungus. These cultivars included material from TBRI, FHIA and selections from Thailand, Indonesia and Australia and evaluated for their resistance to tropical race 4 for two cropping cycles. Several cultivars displayed considerable resistance to Foc TR4, including several FHIA parental lines and hybrids, the Cavendish (AAA) selections GCTCV 215 and GCTCV 247 from TBRI and an Indonesian selection CJ19 showed either very little to no plant death due to the disease.

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