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Appl. Environ. Microbiol., Mar 1995, 899-906, Vol 61, No. 3
M Jacques, LL Kinkel and CE Morris
Total, fluorescent, and pectolytic epiphytic bacterial population sizes
were quantified on leaves of different age groups of broad-leaved endive
during field cultivation from leaf emergence until harvest. Greater
bacterial population densities (log(inf10) CFU per square centimeter) were
observed on outer leaves than on inner leaves of the plants throughout the
growing season. These differences were statistically significant for total
bacterial populations at all sampling times and were often significant for
fluorescent and pectolytic bacterial populations. At harvest, a linear
gradient of decreasing densities of epiphytic bacteria from outer (older)
to inner (younger) leaves of the head was significant. Leaf age influenced
the frequency distribution and variability of bacterial population sizes
associated with leaves of broad-leaved endive. Total bacterial population
sizes were greater at leaf emergence for leaves emerging during the second
half of the cultivation period than for leaves emerging earlier. The size
of fluorescent and pectolytic bacterial populations on newly emerged leaves
increased throughout the season as plants aged. To assess the importance of
plant age on bacterial immigration at leaf emergence, bacterial densities
were quantified on leaves emerging simultaneously on plants of different
ages. In two of the three experiments, greater bacterial population sizes
were observed on leaves emerging on younger plants. This indicates that
factors other than an increase in concentration of airborne bacteria can
lead to increases in population sizes at leaf emergence as plants age in
the field. Results of leaf pruning experiments suggested that adjacent
leaves may act as a barrier for immigration of fluorescent bacteria on
newly emerged leaves. Survival of an inoculated strain of Pseudomonas
fluorescens on newly emerged leaves generally did not vary with the age of
plants. However, these effects were not consistent among experiments,
suggesting that interactions among micro- and macroenvironmental
conditions, physiological condition of leaves, and accessibility of leaves
to airborne bacteria are important in controlling epiphytic bacterial
population sizes.
Copyright © 1995, American Society for Microbiology
Population Sizes, Immigration, and Growth of Epiphytic Bacteria on Leaves of Different Ages and Positions of Field-Grown Endive (Cichorium endivia var. latifolia)
Station de Pathologie Vegetale, Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique, Domaine St. Maurice, 84143 Montfavet Cedex, France, and Department of Plant Pathology, University of Minnesota, St. Paul, Minnesota 55108
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