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Mail and Guardian 27/10/2000, Eldene Eyssell and Elisabeth Lickindorf,
DNA -testing could prevent deadly 'black goo"
Stellenbosch team, has found a fast, accurate test
for the fungus known as "black goo" which has been devastating the
world's vineyards.
Slow to grow, the deadly fungus (Phaeomoniella chlamydospora)
is difficult to detect in its early stages. Like cholesterol that
blocks arteries in humans, the fungus attacks the woody tissue of
grapevines, which reacts by producing a thick, sticky substance - the
consistency and colour of Marmite - that blocks the vessels carrying
water and minerals from the roots to the rest of the plant. The vines
become lethargic, unproductive and off-colour. After three to seven
years they die.
Says
plant pathologist Professor Pedro Crous of the University of
Stellenbosch: "Walking through vineyards I realised what havoc this
fungus was causing. I had to drop whatever else I was doing and
investigate."
The
fungus is ruinous for vine growers in wine-producing areas from
California to South Australia. Although it can take years to develop,
especially in the temperate climates of France, Italy, New Zealand and
South Africa, it appears to be latent in nearly all "mother vines". So
farmers need to know that cuttings are healthy before planting them out
into vineyards.
In
the past it would take four weeks or more before the fungus could be
positively identified under a microscope. Because other fungi
superficially show similar symptoms, it's vital to isolate the specific
fungus quickly to halt further infection.
Crous
and his colleagues, biochemist Professor Dirk Bellstedt and
postgraduate student Michelle Groenewald, have designed a
groundbreaking diagnostic method in the form of DNA "fingerprinting'
that can identify the fungus within 24 hours, even in young nursery
vines that show no symptoms.
Using
minute samples from infected vines in South Africa and the Netherlands,
they grew cultures of the fungus and extracted its DNA, which they then
replicated many thousands of times using primers in a polymerase chain
reaction amplification process. Because they do not allow the DNA of
other fungi to multiply these primers enable the identification of
black goo DNA.
Phaeomoniella chlamydospora
discovered and named by Crous in 1995 - is associated with, and may
even make vines vulnerable to, other debilitating diseases like esca
and apoplexy. It is potentially as cataclysmic as the root-destroying
aphid, phylloxera, that wiped out most of Europe's vineyards in the 19th century.
It
is also causing dissent between vine suppliers and growers. Because the
disease has been found on newly planted farms that have never had
grapevines, let alone black goo, farmers are blaming nurseries for
supplying infected material. Plant pathologists at the Nietvoorbij
Institute of Viticulture and Oenology in Stellenbosch, for instance,
found infected roots in about half of the newly planted nursery vines
that they tested.
Too
little is known about the disease, its causes and how it is
transmitted, however, to knowwhom to blame. "Doing research in this
field is like walking a tightrope," comments Crous, "because so much
money is involved. The nurseries are adamant that the problem doesn't
lie with them; the farmers are equally adamant. We still have lots to
find out, but a process of screening vines, young and old, and
certifying them free of infection has now become very important."
Farmers
complain that the quahty of cuttings is not what it was now that the
industry is growing and nurseries are under pressure to meet increasing
demand for new vines. Nurseries counter by pointing out that black goo
is stress-induced - it can be caused by any combination of conditions,
like careless planting in holes that are too small or too shallow, lack
of water or poor drainage, nutrition deficiency, compacted or poorly
prepared soil.
It's
not certain what causes black goo to spread. It could be airborne,
infecting vine wounds during pruning, or soilborne, attacking plants
through the roots. It could be dispersed by rain and sprinklers or
carried by insects. However it is spread, there is no cure.
"A
healthy plant has about 20 shoots," Crous explains. "Once a plant
becomes sick it produces fewer and fewer shoots, which means fewer and
fewer bunches of grapes - that is why some people call it 'slow dieback
disease'. The length of time it takes for the plant to die depends on
how early it becomes infected and how badly stressed it gets.
"That's
why it's so difficult to estimate the damage. You have to calculate the
cost of the plants that die and also the cost of reduced production
while the plants slowly sicken. The figure could run to millions of
rands."
Crous
envisages a certification scheme that would, within a year or so,
enable nurseries to give young vines a clean bill of health: "We
scientists have done the research and provided the knowledge. Now
entrepreneurs need to apply DNA screening of vines commercially"
The scientific announcement by M Groenewald, DU Bellstedt and PW Crous was published in the South African Journal of Science. |