Classification of
fungal microbes into races is done frequently in
mycology, the study of fungi, and especially in
phytopathology, the study of plant diseases, which are often fungal. The term "physiologic race" was recommended for use over "biologic form" at the
International Botanical Congress of 1935. Although historically the term has been used inconsistently by plant pathologists, the modern trend is to use race to refer to "groups of host genotypes permitting characterization of virulence" (in simpler terms: grouping the parasitic fungi into races based on how strongly they affect particular host plants). Commercial
Cucumis melo (cantaloupe and muskmelon) production, for example, has been engaged in a biological "arms race", since 1925, against
cucurbit powdery mildew, caused by successively arising races of
Podosphaera xanthii fungus, with new
cultivars of melons being developed for resistance to these
pathogens. A 2004
literature review of this issue concluded that "race identification is important for basic research and is especially important for the commercial seed industry", but was seen as having little utility in
horticulture for choosing specific cultivars, because of the rapidity with which the local
pathogen population can change geographically, seasonally, and by host plant. Classification of fungal races can be difficult because host plants' responses to particular populations of fungi can be affected by humidity, light, temperature, and other environmental factors; different host plants may not all respond to particular fungal populations or vice versa; and identification of genetic differences between populations thought to form distinct fungal races can be elusive. ==See also==