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Journal ArticleDOI

Development of a routine DNA-based testing service for soilborne diseases in Australia

TLDR
Issues that were addressed in establishing the DNA-based soil testing service in Australia are discussed and the training and accreditation programs that have been established are explained to ensure that results are interpreted adequately at the farm level.
Abstract
A DNA-based soil testing service operates in Australia to assist grain growers in predicting the likely extent of losses from various soilborne diseases well before a crop is planted. Growers, therefore, have the option of changing cultivars or modifying cropping programs in situations where the risk of crop loss is high. The service was launched in 1997 and although the initial focus was on wheat and barley, pathogens of rotation crops are now included. Key features of the service include a unique high-throughput DNA extraction system to process 500-g soil samples and a series of specific real-time PCR assays that allow a range of fungal and nematode pathogens to be quantified in a single soil sample. Tests for Heterodera avenae, Pratylenchus neglectus, P. thornei, Gaeumannomyces graminis var. tritici, G. graminis var. avenae, Rhizoctonia solani AG-8, Fusarium pseudograminearum, F. culmorum and the pea pathogens Mycosphaerella pinodes and Phoma medicaginis var. pinodella are available at present, while tests for Bipolaris sorokiniana, Ditylenchus dipsaci and Pratylenchus teres are in development. This paper discusses issues that were addressed in establishing the service (e.g. sampling strategies, extraction of DNA from soil, development of specific tests, disease risk categories) and explains the training and accreditation programs that have been established to ensure that results are interpreted adequately at the farm level. It also outlines research being conducted to extend the service to horticulture.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Major genes for Na+ exclusion, Nax1 and Nax2 (wheat HKT1;4 and HKT1;5), decrease Na+ accumulation in bread wheat leaves under saline and waterlogged conditions

TL;DR: Two major genes for Na(+) exclusion in durum wheat, Nax1 and Nax2, were transferred into bread wheat in order to increase its capacity to restrict the accumulation of Na(+.
Journal ArticleDOI

Break crops and rotations for wheat

TL;DR: This review quantifies the yield increase, based on >900 comparisons of wheat growing after a break crop with wheat after wheat, to provide a basis for the decision to grow continuous cereal crops, strategic rotations or tactically selected break crops.
Journal ArticleDOI

Break-crop benefits to wheat in Western Australia – insights from over three decades of research

TL;DR: Analysis of a database of 167 crop sequence experiments conducted throughout Western Australia in the period 1974-2007 revealed that break-crop benefits increased in higher rainfall areas, following higher yielding lupin crops, and that the break- crop benefit in terms of yield and water-use efficiency increased significantly after 1991.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fusarium crown rot caused by Fusarium pseudograminearum in cereal crops: recent progress and future prospects.

TL;DR: The sequencing and comparative analyses of the F. pseudograminearum genome have revealed novel virulence factors, possibly acquired through horizontal gene transfer, and a conserved pathogen gene cluster involved in the degradation of wheat defence compounds has been identified.
Journal ArticleDOI

A multi-phasic approach reveals that apple replant disease is caused by multiple biological agents, with some agents acting synergistically

TL;DR: Multiple biological agents were determined to contribute to ARD including oomycetes (Phytophthora and Pythium) that are important based upon their widespread occurrence, and the fact that metalaxyl application improved seedling growth in four soils.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Real-Time PCR in Clinical Microbiology: Applications for Routine Laboratory Testing

TL;DR: Real-time PCR assays provide sensitivity and specificity equivalent to that of conventional PCR combined with Southern blot analysis, and since amplification and detection steps are performed in the same closed vessel, the risk of releasing amplified nucleic acids into the environment is negligible.
Journal Article

Role of nematodes in soil health and their use as indicators.

TL;DR: The composition of nematode communities (plant-parasitic and free-living) may be used as bioindicators of soil health or condition because composition correlates well with nitrogen cycling and decomposition, two critical ecological processes in soil.
Journal ArticleDOI

Detection and enumeration of bacteria in soil by direct DNA extraction and polymerase chain reaction.

TL;DR: A rapid and specific detection test for bacteria in soil is developed based on the polymerase chain reaction (PCR), and the strong correlation the authors observed between the size of the inocula and the results of the PCR reactions permitted assessment of the validity of the protocol in enumerating the number of microbial cells present in a soil sample.
Journal ArticleDOI

Quantification of bias related to the extraction of DNA directly from soils.

TL;DR: The aim of the present investigation was to improve the extraction, purification, and quantification of DNA derived from as large a portion of the soil microbial community as possible, with special emphasis placed on obtaining DNA from gram-positive bacteria, which form structures that are difficult to disrupt.
Journal ArticleDOI

Recovery of DNA from soils and sediments.

TL;DR: Evaluated procedures for recovering DNA from soil and sediment bacterial communities found that the use of polyvinylpolypyrrolidone was important for the removal of humic compounds to improve the purity of the recovered DNA; without extensive purification, various restriction enzymes failed to cut added target DNA.
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