# Seasonal Effects on Pathogenicity and Biocontrol Management of Botryosphaeria Dieback in Vitis vinifera L. cv. Cabernet Sauvignon and Sauvignon Blanc Under Field Conditions

**Authors:** Diyanira Castillo-Novales, Alejandra Larach, Paulina Vega-Celedón, Michael Seeger, Ximena Besoain

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/plants15050728 · Plants · 2026-02-27

## TL;DR

This study examines how seasonal changes and grapevine parts affect Botryosphaeria dieback and the effectiveness of bacterial biocontrol in vineyards.

## Contribution

The study reveals how tissue type and season influence pathogen behavior and biocontrol efficacy in grapevines under field conditions.

## Key findings

- Neofusicoccum parvum is more aggressive in young shoots, while Diplodia seriata causes severe lesions in lignified wood.
- Bacterial biocontrol strains like Pseudomonas sp. AMCR2b and Rhodococcus sp. PU4 reduce lesion severity, with efficacy varying by tissue and season.
- Biocontrol effects are more stable in lignified arms and can match fungicide efficacy under high disease pressure.

## Abstract

Grapevine trunk diseases, particularly Botryosphaeria dieback, pose a major threat to vineyard sustainability, a risk that is further intensified by climate variability and increasing environmental stress. This study evaluated pathogenicity and bacterial biocontrol efficacy against Neofusicoccum parvum and Diplodia seriata under vineyard conditions, analyzing the combined effects of cultivar (Vitis vinifera L. cv. Cabernet Sauvignon and Sauvignon Blanc), tissue type (young shoots and lignified arms), and phenological season (autumn/winter and spring/summer). Pathogenicity assays revealed clear tissue-age specialization: N. parvum was more aggressive in young shoots, whereas D. seriata caused the most severe vascular lesions in lignified wood. Seasonality further modulated disease expression, with higher lesion development during spring/summer, particularly for N. parvum in young shoots, while D. seriata maintained high aggressiveness in lignified tissues across both seasons. Berry assays provided a rapid initial assessment of isolate virulence but did not fully reflect pathogen behavior in woody tissue under field conditions. Biological treatments using native bacterial strains (Pseudomonas sp. AMCR2b, GcR15a, and Rhodococcus sp. PU4) significantly reduced lesion severity in V. vinifera under field conditions, although efficacy varied by tissue type and season. Biocontrol effects were generally more stable in lignified arms, and under high disease pressure, only the most robust strains maintained consistent protection, in some cases matching or surpassing the efficacy of the fungicide tebuconazole. These results show that both pathogenicity and biocontrol performance against Botryosphaeria dieback in V. vinifera under field conditions are strongly influenced by tissue type and season, supporting bacterial biocontrol as a sustainable component of integrated disease management in vineyards.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** tebuconazole (PubChem CID 86102)
- **Species:** Neofusicoccum parvum (taxon 310453), Diplodia seriata (taxon 420778), Pseudomonas sp. (taxon 306)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** vascular lesions (MESH:D014652), trunk diseases (MESH:D016750), aggressiveness (MESH:D010554)
- **Chemicals:** PU4 (-), tebuconazole (MESH:C087114)
- **Species:** Diplodia seriata (species) [taxon 420778], Vitis vinifera (wine grape, species) [taxon 29760], Rhodococcus sp. (in: high G+C Gram-positive bacteria) (species) [taxon 1831], Pseudomonas sp. (species) [taxon 306], Neofusicoccum parvum (species) [taxon 310453]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

60 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12986627/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12986627