scholarly journals First Report of Fusarium meridionale and Fusarium incarnatum Causing Dry Rot of Konjac in China

Plant Disease ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 102 (1) ◽  
pp. 247 ◽  
Author(s):  
Z. L. Ding ◽  
J. P. Wu ◽  
C. Z. Yang ◽  
J. Zhou ◽  
Z. B. Jiao ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  
Dry Rot ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 101 (4) ◽  
pp. 1245-1245
Author(s):  
Amanda Cupertino de Queiroz Brito ◽  
Juliana Ferreira de Mello ◽  
Sami Jorge Michereff ◽  
Cristina Maria de Souza-Motta ◽  
Alexandre Reis Machado
Keyword(s):  
Dry Rot ◽  

Plant Disease ◽  
2000 ◽  
Vol 84 (7) ◽  
pp. 808-808
Author(s):  
H. F. Schwartz ◽  
K. Otto

Sweet Spanish onion cultivars (Allium cepa L.) in northern Colorado displayed symptoms of postharvest bulb rot during September to November of 1999. This disease appears identical to that reported from infected onions in California in 1988 and is presumably associated with high temperature stress (1). Mature, firm bulbs harvested from scattered fields in Weld County exhibited a brownish discoloration and breakdown of inner scales. Gram negative, rod-shaped, cream-colored bacteria were consistently recovered from infected bulb tissue on nutrient agar. Physiological tests showed that the bacteria utilized glucose in an oxidative and fermentative manner and were catalase positive and oxidase negative. A representative strain was identified by Microbe Inotech Laboratories (St. Louis, MO) as Enterobacter cloacae (Jordan) Hormaeche & Edwards (2) using Biolog analysis, with a similarity index of 0.81. To confirm pathogenicity, a 0.5- to 1.0-ml suspension of bacteria (108 CFU/ml sdw) was injected into firm onion bulbs (7.5 to 10.0 cm diameter). After incubation for 14 days at 22°C in closed plastic bags in the dark, bulbs were cut in half and evaluated. Tan to brown discoloration and initial dry rot, similar to that observed postharvest, was observed in inoculated bulbs. The pathogen was reisolated from six of eight bulbs inoculated with the representative strain. No discoloration or disease developed on eight control bulbs injected with water. To our knowledge, this is the first report of E. cloacae from onion grown in Colorado. References: (1) A. L. Bishop and R. M. Davis. Plant Dis. 74:692, 1990. (2) Hormaeche and Edwards. Int. J. System. Bacteriol. 30:293, 1960.


2015 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Madhurababu Kunta ◽  
Bacilio Salas ◽  
Marissa Gonzales ◽  
John V da Graça
Keyword(s):  
Dry Rot ◽  

Plant Disease ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 98 (2) ◽  
pp. 282-282 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y. Li ◽  
L. D. Chi ◽  
L. G. Mao ◽  
D. D. Yan ◽  
Z. F. Wu ◽  
...  

Ginger (Zingiber officinale Roscoe) is an important commercial crop that is planted in 60,000 to 70,000 ha every year in Shandong Province, China. In 2010, rotted rhizomes of cultivar Laiwu Big Ginger were reported on 20 ha in Anqiu, Shandong Province, and yield losses of up to 70% were reported. The aboveground symptoms were the water-conducting portion of symptomatic rhizomes was discolored brown and had a black dry rot of the cortex tissues (3). Thirty symptomatic rhizomes were sampled from six fields in six farms. Komada's method (1) was used to isolate the pathogen. Ten pieces from each rhizome were washed with sterile distilled water and plated on Komada selective medium at 25°C. White fungal colonies turned orchid after 7 days of incubation. Two types of asexual spores were associated with the colonies: microconidia and macroconidia. The microconidia were the most abundantly produced spores and were oval, elliptical or kidney shaped, and produced on aerial mycelia. Macroconidia had three to five cells and gradually pointed or curved edges, varied in size from 3 to 5 × 19 to 36 μm. The rDNA of the internal transcribed spacer regions 1 and 2 and the 5.8S gene in five isolates were amplified using primers ITS1 and ITS4, and the nucleotide sequence was the same as isolate no. 3, which was deposited in GenBank (Accession No. KC594035). A BLAST search showed 99% identity with the strain Z9 of Fusarium oxysporum (EF611088). Pathogenicity tests of five isolates were carried out in a greenhouse and the pathogenicity test of isolate no. 3 was selected for the method description. Ten 1-month-old ginger plants (cv. Laiwu Big Ginger) were grown in plastic pots (diameter 20 cm) with sandy soil and inoculated. Ten plants were used as untreated controls. Isolate no. 3 was grown on casein hydrolysate medium (4) for 72 h and the spores were harvested in sterile distilled water. Aqueous spore suspensions of isolate no. 3 were adjusted with deionized water to 1 × 108 CFU/ml as the inoculum. The prepared inoculum was injected with a syringe into the soil around the rhizome of ginger plants. Inoculated plants were placed in the greenhouse at 24 to 26°C and assessed for rhizome rot on the 14th day after inoculation. Disease severity was recorded based on a scale in which – = no symptoms; 1 = small lesions on seedlings, no rot; 2 = seedling rot; and 3 = plant dead. Similar rhizome rot symptoms were observed after inoculation. The inoculated isolate was re-isolated from diseased rhizomes, confirming its pathogenicity. To our knowledge, this is the first report of rhizome rot of ginger caused by F. oxysporum in China. Rhizome rot of ginger caused by Fusarium spp. is well known in Asian countries such as India (2). References: (1) H. Komada. Rev. Plant Prot. Res. 8:114, 1975. (2) V. Shanmugam et al. Biol Control. 66:1, 2013. (3) E. E. Trujillo. Diseases of Ginger (Zingiber officinale) in Hawaii, Circular 62, Hawaii Agricultural Experiment Station, University of Hawaii, December, 1964. (4) G. E. Wessman. Appl. Microbiol. 13:426, 1965.


Plant Disease ◽  
2001 ◽  
Vol 85 (9) ◽  
pp. 1030-1030 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. D. Peters ◽  
I. K. Macdonald ◽  
K. A. MacIsaac ◽  
S. Woodworth

Fusarium dry rot is a significant postharvest disease of potato (Solanum tuberosum L.) and is often controlled by applying thiabendazole to tubers prior to storage. However, thiabendazole-resistant isolates of Fusarium spp. have been reported from Europe (2), the United States (1), and Canada (1,4). To address concerns, samples of potato tubers showing symptoms of dry rot caused by Fusariumspp. were collected from three storage bays in a commercial storage facility in Nova Scotia, Canada, in February 2001. All tubers had been treated with thiabendazole after harvest and prior to storage. Tubers were cut longitudinally, and small tissue samples (10 × 5 × 3 mm) were taken from the margins of internal necrotic regions with a sterile scalpel, surface-sterilized in 0.6% sodium hypochlorite for 15 s, rinsed twice in sterile distilled water (SDW), and blotted dry on sterile filter paper. Tissue pieces were plated on 0.5-strength potato dextrose agar (PDA) amended with tetracycline (0.05 g/liter) and streptomycin sulfate (0.1 g/liter). Petri dishes were incubated in the dark at 22°C for 4 to 7 days. After incubation, hyphal tips from the margins of actively growing isolates were removed with a sterile probe and plated on 0.5-strength PDA to generate pure cultures. Of 35 potato tubers examined, 10 (29%) yielded Fusarium isolates for further study. All 10 isolates were identified as F. sambucinum Fuckel according to Nelson et al. (3). Agar plugs (5 mm diameter) taken from the margins of 7- to 10-day-old cultures of F. sambucinum isolates were transferred to petri dishes containing 0.5-strength PDA amended with thiabendazole at 0, 1, 5, 10, 20, 50, or 100 mg/liter. Thiabendazole was prepared as a stock solution in SDW and added to molten agar after autoclaving. Cultures were grown in the dark for 7 days at 22°C, after which mycelial growth diameter was measured using digital calipers. Two measurements, along orthogonal diameters, were taken from each of three replicate plates for a total of six measurements per thiabendazole concentration. Means were calculated, and the diameter of the inoculation plug was subtracted from each mean. Calculated EC50 values (thiabendazole concentration inhibiting pathogen growth by 50%) were obtained by regression of the log of the chemical concentration against the corresponding probit of percent fungal inhibition. All isolates of F. sambucinum were resistant to thiabendazole, with EC50 values ranging from 7 to 82 mg/liter. Six isolates had EC50 values between 40 and 82 mg/liter. Control isolates of F. sambucinum, F. avenaceum, F. solani, and F. oxysporum were sensitive to thiabendazole, with EC50 values of <1 mg/liter. Although isolates of F. sambucinum resistant to thiabendazole have been recovered from eastern Canada (1,4), this is the first report of thiabendazole resistance in F. sambucinum isolates from tubers in commercial storage in the Annapolis Valley of Nova Scotia, Canada, a production region that concentrates on growing processing potatoes for the potato chip industry and is several hundred kilometers from other potato-growing regions of Prince Edward Island and New Brunswick. References: (1) A. E. Desjardins. Am. Potato J. 72:145, 1995. (2) G. A. Hide et al. Plant Pathol. 41:745, 1992. (3) P. E. Nelson et al. 1983. Fusarium Species: An Illustrated Manual for Identification . Pennsylvania State University Press, University Park, PA. (4) H. W. Platt. Phytoprotection 78:1, 1997.


Plant Disease ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 100 (8) ◽  
pp. 1794-1794 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. L. Coyne ◽  
Y. A. Kolombia ◽  
G. Kariuki ◽  
N. Luambano ◽  
W. Bert
Keyword(s):  
Dry Rot ◽  

Plant Disease ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 92 (2) ◽  
pp. 312-312 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. H. Yang ◽  
R. L. Conner ◽  
H. Cai ◽  
F. Li ◽  
Y. Y. Chen

In 2004, rhizome blight of ginger (Zingiber officinale (Willd.) Roscoe) (cv. Yunnanxiaojiang) occurred in the Kunming District of China. The surface of ginger rhizome after harvest was crimpled and covered with white hyphae. Initial symptoms on ginger were wilting on the stem and the color of the rhizome turned from white to light brown with no lesion formation. After 2 weeks, the surface of ginger rhizome was covered with white hyphae and a dry rot set in under humid conditions. The yield loss in ginger almost reached 50% because of the disease. An AG-R tester isolate paired with the unknown 37 isolates of Rhizoctonia spp. from the diseased ginger rhizomes caused a C2 reaction that confirmed their identity. Isolates of AG-R (GenBank Accession Nos. DQ885780 and DQ885781) had 100% sequence similarity with 5.8S rDNA-ITS with the AG-R tester isolate (GenBank Accession No. AF354082). To produce infected soil inoculum, 10 isolates were cultured on potato dextrose agar in a 9-cm petri dish for 3 to 4 days and then covered with approximately 20 g of autoclaved soil and kept at 25°C for 3 to 4 days. Seedlings of ginger (cv, Yunanxiaojiang) were planted in natural potting soil at a density of one plant per vinyl pot (8 cm in diameter, 9 cm high) and grown in the greenhouse for 7 days. Each seedling was inoculated with 7 g of infested soil by placing it around the rhizome. Control plants were inoculated with autoclaved soil. The experiments were carried out three times, each time with three replicates in a growth chamber kept at 25 and 16°C with a 16-h light and 8-h dark photoperiod. After 14 days, the disease severity was recorded based on a scale in which – = no symptoms; + = small lesions on seedlings, no blight; ++ = seedling blight; and +++ = plant dead. All of the 10 tested AG-R isolates caused ginger seedling blight. Rhizoctonia spp. was reisolated from these plants, confirming its pathogenicity. To our knowledge, this is the first report of rhizome blight of ginger caused by Rhizoctonia spp. and binucleate Rhizoctonia AG-R in China. References: (1) B. Sneh et al. Page 135 in: Identification of Rhizoctonia Species. The American Phytopathological Society, St. Paul, MN, 1998.


2011 ◽  
Vol 24 ◽  
pp. 5 ◽  
Author(s):  
V. Sagar ◽  
S. Sharma ◽  
A. Jeevalatha ◽  
S.K. Chakrabarti ◽  
B.P. Singh
Keyword(s):  
Dry Rot ◽  

Plant Disease ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 93 (7) ◽  
pp. 766-766
Author(s):  
B. M. Barguil ◽  
F. M. P. Viana ◽  
R. M. Anjos ◽  
J. E. Cardoso

Roses are a high-value niche crop in the higher altitudes of northeastern Brazil. From July of 2007 and throughout 2008, severe stem rot and wilting of rose seedlings were observed in commercial fields in the São Benedito District, Ceará State, Brazil. Although economic losses due to the disease are unknown, it poses a threat to the growing rose industry in that region. Symptoms included leaf yellowing and abscission followed by plant collapse. Symptoms appeared earlier when grafted seedlings were produced during periods of high relative humidity (80 to 98%) and warm temperatures (20 to 31°C). In the laboratory, symptomatic seedlings were rinsed with distilled water, surface sterilized with 0.5% NaOCl, and incubated on PDA at 26 ± 2°C. Fusarium oxysporum was consistently isolated from infected scions and rootstocks. Identification of F. oxysporum was based on colony and conidia morphology obtained from single-spore colonies. Five 4-week-old rose (‘Carola’) seedlings were inoculated with a culture of fungus by spraying the needle-wounded scion with a spore suspension (1 × 105 CFU/ml). The spore suspension was obtained from a 1-week-old PDA culture incubated at 26 ± 2°C. Control seedlings were sprayed with sterile water. Inoculated seedlings were incubated for the first 48 h in a saturated humidity chamber. After 20 days at room temperature, the scion tissue of inoculated seedlings turned necrotic. Two symptomatic seedlings were placed in a saturated humidity chamber for 24 h to determine if fungal sporulation could be observed on the surface of the tissue. After 5 to 7 days, a white mycelium was observed over the necrotic tissue. Seedlings sprayed with sterile water remained symptomless. F. oxysporum was reisolated from symptomatic tissue. An isolate of F. oxyporum (No. 1484) was deposited in the Mycology Collection of Lavras (Minas Gerais State, Brazil). To our knowledge, this is the first report of F. oxysporum causing a disease on rose seedlings in Brazil.


Author(s):  
Rahul Kumar Tiwari ◽  
Bishnu Maya Bashyal ◽  
V. Shanmugam ◽  
Milan Kumar Lal ◽  
Ravinder Kumar ◽  
...  

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