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Spinach is a member of the plant family Chenopodiaceae, which also contains the
crop plants beets and Swiss chard as well as weeds such as nettleleaf goosefoot
and lambsquarters. Downy mildew, caused by the oomycete pathogen Peronospora farinosa,
which exists as different races or subtypes, can develop on all of these plants.
A spinach grower may wonder: can isolates of the pathogen that cause downy mildew
on beets, Swiss chard, or weed hosts cause downy mildew on spinach? Monterey County,
California Farm Advisor Steve Koike and colleagues conducted research to answer
this question. Isolates of the pathogen from nettleleaf goosefoot, lambsquarters,
beet and Swiss chard were each used to inoculate spinach. The result: no disease
development. In a separate experiment, the downy mildew pathogen from spinach was
used to inoculate nettleleaf goosefoot and lambsquarters. The result again was no
disease development. The bottom line is that spinach growers need not worry about
related Chenopodiaceae such as nettleleaf goosefoot, lambsquarters, beets or Swiss
chard as potential sources of inoculum for their spinach crop. Even though the bluish-purple
evidence of the pathogen on the underside of leaves is similar in appearance on
all of these plants, the particular isolates of the downy mildew pathogen have very
specific and limited host ranges.
To contact Mike Matheron go to: matheron@ag.arizona.edu.
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For questions or comments on any of the topics please contact Marco Pena at the Yuma Agricultural Center.
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