scholarly journals First Report of Stemphylium Leaf Spot of Spinach (Spinacia oleracea) Caused by Stemphylium beticola in New York State

Plant Disease ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 104 (11) ◽  
pp. 3068-3068
Author(s):  
K. A. Spawton ◽  
M. McGrath ◽  
L. J. du Toit
1989 ◽  
Vol 25 (2) ◽  
pp. 270-272 ◽  
Author(s):  
Susan E. Wade ◽  
Wayne I. Anderson ◽  
Jeffrey D. Kidder

Plant Disease ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 104 (4) ◽  
pp. 1251
Author(s):  
Xing Ma ◽  
Jean M. Bonasera ◽  
Jo Ann E. Asselin ◽  
Steven V. Beer ◽  
Bryan Swingle

Plant Disease ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 96 (9) ◽  
pp. 1373-1373
Author(s):  
S. Kenaley ◽  
M. Daughtrey ◽  
D. O'Brien ◽  
S. Jensen ◽  
K. Snover-Clift ◽  
...  

Owing to their relative disease resistance and showy spring flowers, cultivars of Callery pear (Pyrus calleryana) are commonly planted ornamental and streetside trees in New York state and elsewhere in the U.S. Over the past 2 years, we collected a leaf rust on P. calleryana ‘Bradford’ or ‘Chanticleer’ (also known as ‘Cleveland Select’) from Hempstead (Nassau County), East Moriches and Riverhead (Suffolk Co.), Rochester (Monroe Co.), and Staten Island (Richmond Co.), NY. Leaf samples were collected in June and August 2010 and 2011; adaxial surface lesions resembled infection by fungi in the genus Gymnosporangium (Pucciniales). Lesions were yellow- to red-orange with irregular red to purple margins, 1 to 3.5 cm in any one dimension, and contained 20 to 45 black, subepidermal spermogonia. Hypertrophied plant tissue was evident on the abaxial surface below the spermagonia, but aecia were absent. Genomic DNA was extracted from rust-infected tissue on P. calleryana ‘Bradford’ (East Moriches, Hempstead, Rochester, and Staten Island) and ‘Chanticleer’ (Riverhead), and the D1/D2 domain of the 28s ribosomal DNA was PCR-amplified using primers 4 and 11 (3) and sequenced. Partial 28s rDNA sequences (GenBank Accession Nos. JN969962 to JN969966) were either identical or nearly so (99%) to that of the trellis rust fungus, G. sabinae (AF426209 and AY512845). G. sabinae produces aecia with conspicuous balanoid peridia from August to November or until leaf drop; both characteristics are unique to the genus (1). We therefore monitored rust-infected Callery pears in Riverhead as well as a common pear (P. communis) in Ithaca, NY, for the appearance of aecia in 2011. The telial state of G. sabinae on taxa in the genus Juniperus sect. Sabina (e.g., J. sabina and J. virginiana) was not observed within the vicinity of affected pears. In late September, aecia of G. sabinae with morphological features identical to those described by Kerns (1) and Yun et al. (4) were collected from a P. calleryana in Riverhead (Cornell Plant Pathology Herbarium; CUP-067943) and a P. communis in Ithaca (CUP-067943): aecia roestelioid, hypophyllous; periderium balanoid, apex intact and conic, cancellate along the sides; aeciospores brown, globoid to broadly ellipsoid, 22.5 to 28.2 × 25.1 to 32.4 μm, walls 3.3 to 4.7 μm thick. A native of Eurasia and North Africa, G. sabinae was first identified in North America on common pear in 1960 in British Columbia and California (2). Thereafter, the fungus was collected on Callery pear in northern Washington in 1988 and recently, in Michigan in 2009 (4). To our knowledge, this is the first report of G. sabinae on P. calleryana ‘Bradford’ and ‘Chanticleer’ as well as P. communis in New York and the new records represent a large (>800 km) eastward expansion of the distribution of the pathogen in the U.S. The geographic locations of affected trees described herein suggest that the trellis rust fungus is well-established across New York, and has spread undetected since its introduction. Given the widespread planting of Callery pear and occurrence of susceptible Juniperus spp. in urban landscapes of New York, G. sabinae has the potential to become a perennial problem where epidemiological conditions permit host alternation. References: (2) F. Kerns. A revised taxonomic account of Gymnosporangium, 1973. (4) A. McCain. Plant Dis. Rep. 45:151, 1961. (1) G. Van der Auwera et al. FEBS Lett. 338:133, 1994. (3) H. Yun et al. Plant Dis. 93:841, 2009.


2016 ◽  
Vol 26 (4) ◽  
pp. 542-546
Author(s):  
Rachel A. Kreis ◽  
Holly W. Lange ◽  
Stephen Reiners ◽  
Christine D. Smart

Twelve commercial cauliflower (Brassica oleracea var. botrytis) varieties were evaluated for horticultural traits and susceptibility to alternaria leaf spot (Alternaria brassicicola) at the New York State Agricultural Experiment Station in Geneva, NY, in 2014 and 2015. Data including total yield, curd weight, curd width, plant height, days to maturity, and length of harvest were collected for each variety. A duplicate trial was planted in each year and inoculated with A. brassicicola, the causal agent of alternaria leaf spot, and the percentage of disease was assessed for each commercial cauliflower variety. Most of the commercial varieties were similar in susceptibility to disease and yield. ‘Artica’ and ‘Apex’ were ranked among the highest yielding varieties each year of the trial. The varieties ‘Graffiti’ and ‘Violet Queen’, both of which produce purple curds, had significantly less alternaria leaf spot compared with other varieties. Differences were seen between the 2 years of the trial in performance of individual varieties as influenced by temperatures during the growing season. This study demonstrates that some cauliflower varieties perform better than others under New York State growing conditions.


Author(s):  
Marvin S. Swartz ◽  
Jeffrey W. Swanson ◽  
Henry J. Steadman ◽  
Pamela Clark Robbins ◽  
John Monahan

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