A. Kate Turner, MS
PhD Candidate
University of Tennessee
Knoxville, Tennessee, United States
Mitchell Richmond
University of Tennessee
Knoxville, Tennessee, United States
Zachariah Hansen
Research Plant Pathologist
Robert W. Holley Center for Agriculture and Health, US Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service
Ithaca, New York, United States
Phytophthora nicotianae, a soilborne oomycete, causes one of the most economically devastating diseases of tobacco known as black shank. In the past several years, burley tobacco growers have reported declining yields. Phytophthora nicotianae has two important races (race 0 and 1) with race 1 being the current, predominant race in tobacco growing areas across the U.S. Black shank is managed through a combination of crop rotation, fungicides, and selection of resistant varieties. We hypothesized that P. nicotianae race 1 could be contributing to burley tobacco yield decline in race 1 resistant varieties despite remaining mostly asymptomatic in the presence of black shank. A greenhouse trial was established to evaluate growth parameters of the resistant variety ‘KT215LC’ which is fully resistant to race 0 (level 10/10 resistance) and highly resistant to race 1 (level 9/10 resistance), and ‘Hybrid 404LC’ which is fully susceptible to black shank races 0 and 1. Results show ‘KT 215LC’ was negatively impacted in the presence of race 1 in terms of growth parameters such as plant height, stem diameter, leaf length, leaf number, and leaf, stem, and root mass. These results suggest that P. nicotianae may be contributing to yield decline on varieties with high resistance to race 1. The knowledge from these results could help burley tobacco growers make more informed decisions when managing their tobacco crop to potentially maximize their profits and reduce losses because of P. nicotianae.