| Literature DB >> 35251096 |
Abhilash K Chandel1,2, Michelle M Moyer3, Markus Keller3, Lav R Khot1, Gwen-Alyn Hoheisel4.
Abstract
Grape phylloxera (Daktulosphaira vitifoliae, syn. Viteus vitifoliae), a destructive root and foliar pest of grapevines, occurs in almost all viticulture regions worldwide. However, certain regions have remained "phylloxera free." Until recently, this included Washington state (United States), where this insect is regulated as a quarantine pest by Washington State Department of Agriculture. In 2019, established phylloxera populations were discovered in Washington. Phylloxera is typically managed by using resistant or tolerant rootstocks. In Washington, most wine grapes are grown on their own roots of the susceptible species Vitis vinifera instead of grafted rootstock, and thus, are at high risk of vine death should they become infested with phylloxera. This article reports development of a phylloxera risk map for Washington state using geographical soil texture (sand content) and soil temperature data. Weighted averages of soil texture data (mapping year: 2016, depth: 0-100 cm) were obtained from United States Department of Agriculture-Natural Resource Conservation Service (USDA-NRCS) and soilgrids. Soil temperature data were obtained from over 200 weather stations of Washington State University's AgWeatherNet network. Threshold-based classifications were performed in Quantum GIS software on the rasterized soil sand content and temperature independently to derive low, moderate, and high-risk areas, with risk defined as site suitability for optimal phylloxera development. The validation identified 22 out of 23 confirmed phylloxera-positive sites as "high risk," and one site as "moderate risk" when considering soil sand content alone. Soil temperature data alone classified 10 sites as "high risk" and 13 sites as "low risk." When soil sand content was combined with soil temperature (as a risk modifier), 10 sites were classified as "high risk," 12 sites as "high-moderate risk" and one site as "moderate-low" risk. Ground-truth comparisons of confirmed positive sites for phylloxera agreed with past research suggesting that soil sand content is the dominant factor influencing phylloxera infestation. Pertinent risk assessment can be an important component for vineyard decision-making, including whether to use rootstocks in vineyard development or replant scenarios. It may also help to focus the initial scouting and identification efforts to sites and may be helpful when tracking and developing solutions for quarantine pests, such as phylloxera.Entities:
Keywords: geographic information system; grapevine; phylloxera; risk prediction; soil sand content; soil temperature
Year: 2022 PMID: 35251096 PMCID: PMC8888419 DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2022.827393
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Plant Sci ISSN: 1664-462X Impact factor: 5.753
Figure 1Soil sand content raster map for the state of Washington (depth: 0–100 cm, spatial resolution: 14.5 m/pixel).
Figure 2Raster map of mean daily maximum soil temperature data for Washington state within the June 1 to August 31 period averaged for 11 years (2010–2021).
Figure 3Process flowchart for mapping soil sand content and soil temperature data for assessing phylloxera infestation risk.
Phylloxera risk classes based on soil sand and temperature thresholds.
| Sand content (%) | Soil temperature (°C) | Risk |
|---|---|---|
| <65 | 18–27 | High |
| 65–80 | – | Moderate |
| >80 | <18, >27 | Low |
Phylloxera risk considering combined effects of soil sand content and soil temperature, and the explanation of risk assessment for the event of phylloxera introduction to a site.
| Risk | Explanation | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Sand-based | Temperature-based | Overall | |
| Low | Low | Low | Sand content and temperature are not conducive for phylloxera development. |
| Low | High | Low | While sand content is not conducive, temperature is. The temperature will have an effect only if the sand content is reduced (e.g., by addition of organic matter). |
| Moderate | Low | Moderate-low | Sand content is moderately conducive for phylloxera development, but the temperature is not. This combination will reduce the overall risk of rapid phylloxera development. |
| Moderate | High | Moderate | Sand content is moderately conducive for phylloxera development, and temperatures are optimal. Phylloxera could survive and could potentially thrive if soil sand content is reduced further. |
| High | Low | High-moderate | Sand content is ideal for rapid phylloxera development, but soil temperature is not. Phylloxera development is possible, albeit at a slightly lower rate. |
| High | High | High | Soil sand content and temperatures are ideal for the rapid development of phylloxera. |
Figure 4Phylloxera risk maps derived from (A) soil sand content, (B) soil temperature, and (C) combined sand content and soil temperature data. Larger versions of these maps are available on https://wine.wsu.edu/extension/grapes-vineyards/grape-pests/phylloxera.
Figure 5(A) Area under predicted risk classes and (B) validation with confirmed positive sites in Washington. CP, confirmed positives; H, high; H-M, high-moderate; M, moderate; M-L, moderate-low; and L, low.