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Research Findings Could Eventually Save $30 Million Annually for Strawberry Growers

UF/IFAS researchers are looking for ways to thwart angular leaf spot

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ance Whitaker, a UF/IFAS associate professor of horticultural sciencesUF/IFAS researchers are looking for ways to thwart angular leaf spot, a pathogen that can destroy up to ten percent of Florida’s $300 million-a-year strawberry crop in years with multiple freezes. In newly published research, Vance Whitaker, a UF/IFAS associate professor of horticultural sciences, and a team of researchers found genetic markers they believe can lead them to develop strawberry cultivars that are more resistant to angular leaf spot.Photo Credit: UF/IFAS file

GAINESVILLE, Fla. — Strawberry growers may eventually save $30 million a year with genetic findings from a University of Florida Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences study.

UF/IFAS researchers are looking for ways to thwart angular leaf spot, a pathogen that can destroy up to ten percent of Florida’s $300 million-a-year strawberry crop in years with multiple freezes.

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In the research, Vance Whitaker, a UF/IFAS associate professor of horticultural sciences, and a team of researchers found genetic markers they believe can lead them to develop strawberry cultivars that are more resistant to angular leaf spot. Genetic markers are short sequences of DNA used to identify a chromosome or nearby genes in a genetic map.

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In two years of field trials, researchers at the UF/IFAS Gulf Coast Research and Education Center—along with colleagues from Oregon, The Netherlands, and Canada—found places in strawberry genes that show promise for developing cultivars that are resistant to this disease. 

“We got closer to finding the exact gene,” said Whitaker, a UF/IFAS strawberry breeder and Extension specialist, who led the study.

UF/IFAS scientists developed a genetic marker that can track the resistance to angular leaf spot during the breeding process with about 95 percent accuracy. They will use this data to predict which seedlings will be resistant to the pathogen and only test those in the field that should be resistant.

“It’s kind of like stacking a deck of cards,” Whitaker said “It makes breeding for resistance much more efficient than if we didn’t have the marker.”

The impacts of the researchers’ findings could stretch far beyond Florida.

“This disease can be a problem in many countries around the world, and this could help any growers that use future resistant varieties,” Whitaker said.

Angular leaf spot, caused by the bacterium Xanthomonas fragariae, is the only major bacterial strawberry pathogen, according to the study. It was first described in Minnesota in 1960 and has since been reported in most major strawberry producing regions worldwide. The pathogen is primarily spread by rain or the use of overhead irrigation.

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Currently, some growers treat the disease with chemicals containing copper, Whitaker said. Chemical treatments are mildly effective but may result in as much yield loss as the disease itself, he said. Thus, UF/IFAS researchers are looking for strawberry cultivars resistant to angular leaf spot.

Whitaker, who also works as a statewide Extension specialist, said it will likely be a few years from now before scientists can commercialize a strawberry cultivar that is completely resistant to angular leaf spot.

The UF/IFAS-led study is published in the journal Theoretical and Applied Geneticshttp://bit.ly/2a4TVvt.