And it doesn't just stop at scion diseases.
When first released, the MM106 rootstock was resistant to phytophthora crown rot. But due to MM106 being so widely grown, specialised "rootstock-specific" crown rot strains evolved to attack it - and can now do so very efficiently.
The "wonder rootstock" M116 is resistant to MM106 crown rot, and so is MM111 (as proven by me planting M116 and MM111 directly into the hole where a dead MM106 was removed).
But if M116 or MM111 become popular in the future, it would be expected that they will also lose resistance to new races of disease.
However, I concede that some cultivars and some rootstocks will have more intrinsic resistance than others because of genetic variation and to some extent the inheritance of good or bad genes from their parents - perhaps three minor resistance genes in one variety, only two minor resistance genes in another variety; tipping the odds that the one with least resistance genes would be the easiest for the diseases to overcome, with some further modification depending on whether the resistance genes were already overrun in their parents.
When first released, the MM106 rootstock was resistant to phytophthora crown rot. But due to MM106 being so widely grown, specialised "rootstock-specific" crown rot strains evolved to attack it - and can now do so very efficiently.
The "wonder rootstock" M116 is resistant to MM106 crown rot, and so is MM111 (as proven by me planting M116 and MM111 directly into the hole where a dead MM106 was removed).
But if M116 or MM111 become popular in the future, it would be expected that they will also lose resistance to new races of disease.
However, I concede that some cultivars and some rootstocks will have more intrinsic resistance than others because of genetic variation and to some extent the inheritance of good or bad genes from their parents - perhaps three minor resistance genes in one variety, only two minor resistance genes in another variety; tipping the odds that the one with least resistance genes would be the easiest for the diseases to overcome, with some further modification depending on whether the resistance genes were already overrun in their parents.
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