Health Status of Ready-to-Plant Grapevine Nursery Material in Canada Regarding Young Vine Decline Fungi

Plant Dis. 2023 Dec;107(12):3708-3717. doi: 10.1094/PDIS-05-23-0900-SR. Epub 2023 Dec 13.

Abstract

Young vine decline (YVD), caused by several taxonomically different fungi, results in the decline and death of grapevines within a few years after planting. Infection can occur in nursery mother blocks and/or at several stages in the nursery propagation process, but the final plant material may remain asymptomatic. Four nurseries that sell ready-to-plant grapevines in Canada were sampled to evaluate the health status with regard to YVD fungi, including Botryosphaeriaceae spp., Cadophora luteo-olivacea, Dactylonectria macrodidyma, Dactylonectria torresensis, Phaeoacremonium minimum, and Phaeomoniella chlamydospora. Plants representing three cultivars, 'Chardonnay', 'Merlot', and 'Pinot noir', either grafted onto '3309C' rootstock or self-rooted, were provided by the nurseries. Samples from the roots, base of the rootstock or self-rooted cultivar, graft-union, and scion were collected from each plant. DNA was extracted, and the total abundance of each fungus was quantified using Droplet Digital PCR. Results revealed that 99% of plants harbored at least one of the fungi studied, with a mean of three different fungal species that were present per grapevine. Droplet Digital PCR results showed that the abundance of the different fungi significantly varied between different sections of each plant, individual plants for each cultivar, and cultivars from the same nursery. Necrosis measurements were recorded from the base of the rootstock or self-rooted cultivars and did not correlate with fungal abundance recorded in that section for each grapevine, but necrosis was consistent across cultivars within nurseries. Five different rootstocks were compared from one nursery, and results showed no differences between rootstocks and their health status. Among all nurseries, C. luteo-olivacea was the most prevalent fungus (97% of the plants), while D. macrodidyma was the least commonly found (13% of the plants). This study shows that ready-to-plant nursery material sold in Canada is likely to be infected with several YVD fungi and that presence and abundance of fungi vary significantly among individual grapevines and nurseries.

Keywords: Botryosphaeria dieback; Droplet Digital PCR; Petri disease; Vitis vinifera; black foot; nursery; young vine decline.

MeSH terms

  • Canada
  • Gardens*
  • Health Status
  • Necrosis
  • Plant Diseases* / microbiology