Sclerotinia borealis
Sclerotinia borealis or snow scald is a psychrophilic necrotrophic plant pathogen with wide host range, including crop plants, such as barley, rye and wheat, and thus causing much economical damage.
Physiology
Temperature
Minimum growth temperature is below. Optimal growth range is. Maximum growth temperature, whereupon irregular mycelial growth occurs and oxygen consumption is far above healthy level; does not survive above. Sclerotia germination optimal at four weeks of daily thermal cycles of followed by. Frost is necessary during life cycle.Enzymes
Produces polygalacturonase; variant with maximum activity between and only 30% of max activity at. Activity preserved at beyond two years, but inactivated by overnight at room temperature, or by 30 minutes of. A crude extract of cultured bran contained a particular low mass molecule which maintained activity at low temperature.Antifreeze proteins
Necessitated by its lifestyle, S. borealis produces its own antifreeze proteins. One of these is homologous to Atlantic winter flounder type I antifreeze protein. Extracellular presence of its AFPs is not necessary.Life cycle
Upon the spring snowmelt, wet leaves develop S. borealis growth. Sclerotia and mycelia grow on sheaths, crowns, surfaces, and interiors of leaves. It has dramatically more growth – and damage to its hosts – in growth seasons following winters with greater depth of soil freezing but less snow cover. S. borealis is very soil-frost-dependent.Morphology
Sclerotia are long and wide when formed.Apothecia cup-shaped pale yellow to pale brown, cup diameter, stalks high.
Mycelia gray.