Synchytrium endobioticum is a chytrid fungus that causes the potato wart disease or black Scab. It also infects some other plants of the Solanum genus, though potato is the only cultivated host.
At least 18 pathotypes of the fungus exist, most of them with quite limited ranges in Central Europe. The most widely distributed is the pathotype 1.
Under certain stress conditions some zoospore pairs fuse, resulting in a zygote. The zygote bearing host cells divide, forming eventually the walls of a new winter sporangium. The In autumn, the warts rot and disintegrate, releasing new thick-walled resting spores of the fungus into the soil. The diploid resting spores (pro-soruses) undergo a dormancy period and before germination (probally) a meiotic division and several mitotic divisions, becoming a sorus.
S. endobioticum originates from the Andean region of South-America, with now almost worldwide distribution in areas where potatoes are cultivated (absent in most of tropical Africa, Middle East, most of Canada, Japan and Australia).
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Synchytrium endobioticum".
Home Page • arts • business • computers • games • health • hospitals • home • kids & teens • news • physicians • recreation• reference • regional • science • shopping • society • sports • world