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oxysporum

Oxysporum is a species epithet used in several fungal taxa, most notably Fusarium oxysporum, a widespread soil-borne plant pathogen belonging to the phylum Ascomycota. Fusarium oxysporum is a species complex comprising many physiologically diverse isolates, classified into numerous formae speciales (ff. sp.) that determine host range.

Biology and ecology: The fungus grows as hyphae and forms chlamydospores that enable long-term survival in

Diagnosis and management: Identification combines symptom observation with isolation and molecular assays targeting housekeeping genes or

Impact and significance: F. oxysporum is a globally important plant pathogen, responsible for substantial crop losses.

soil.
It
infects
plants
primarily
through
the
roots
and
colonizes
xylem
vessels,
causing
vascular
wilt.
Infected
plants
exhibit
wilting,
yellowing,
stunting,
and
sometimes
browning
of
vascular
tissue
in
the
stem;
the
disease
can
progress
rapidly
under
warm,
moist
conditions.
The
pathogen
persists
in
soil
for
years
and
can
spread
with
water,
infested
soil,
or
contaminated
tools.
F.
oxysporum
has
a
cosmopolitan
distribution
and
a
broad
host
range,
with
different
ff.
sp.
specialized
to
crops
such
as
tomato
(f.
sp.
lycopersici),
banana
(f.
sp.
cubense),
and
various
cucurbits
and
ornamentals.
pathogenicity-related
genes
(including
SIX
genes)
to
infer
formae
speciales.
Not
all
isolates
are
pathogenic;
some
nonpathogenic
strains
exist
and
are
studied
for
biocontrol
and
endophytic
associations.
Control
is
challenging;
strategies
include
crop
rotation
with
non-hosts,
use
of
resistant
cultivars,
soil
solarization,
sanitation,
and
biological
control
agents.
Quarantine
and
sanitation
are
important
to
limit
spread.
Notably,
the
tropical
race
4
of
the
banana-infecting
form
has
threatened
Cavendish
cultivars
in
multiple
regions.