scholarly journals Fungal Trunk Pathogens Associated With Juglans regia in the Czech Republic

Plant Disease ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 104 (3) ◽  
pp. 761-771 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Eichmeier ◽  
J. Pecenka ◽  
M. Spetik ◽  
T. Necas ◽  
I. Ondrasek ◽  
...  

Juglans regia L. (English walnut) trees with cankers and dieback symptoms were observed in two regions in the Czech Republic. Isolations were made from diseased branches. In total, 138 fungal isolates representing 10 fungal species were obtained from wood samples and identified based on morphological characteristics and molecular methods: Cadophora novi-eboraci, Cadophora spadicis, Cryptovalsa ampelina, Diaporthe eres, Diplodia seriata, Dothiorella omnivora, Eutypa lata, Eutypella sp., Peroneutypa scoparia, and Phaeoacremonium sicilianum. Pathogenicity tests conducted under field conditions with all species using the mycelium-plug method indicated that Eutypa lata and Cadophora spp. were highly virulent to woody stems of walnut. This is the first study to detect and identify fungal trunk pathogens associated with diseased walnut trees in Europe.

2020 ◽  
Vol 56 (No. 3) ◽  
pp. 163-179
Author(s):  
Barbora Mieslerová ◽  
Miloslav Kitner ◽  
Veronika Petřeková ◽  
Jitka Dvořáková ◽  
Michaela Sedlářová ◽  
...  

Powdery mildews on the Asteraceae family were surveyed during 2007–2015 in the Czech Republic with the aim to increase our knowledge about occurrence, morphological characteristics and host specificity of powdery mildews on this family. In total, 32 host species with symptoms of powdery mildew were collected, and the fungal species were identified based on microscopic observations. These showed great variability in their morphological characteristics. Our study confirmed the high host specificity of powdery mildew species to their original hosts. A deeper knowledge of the taxonomy of the Asteraceae has brought substantial changes in the delimitation of powdery mildew species. In particular, delimitation of the three varieties of Golovinomyces asterum was studied and discussed.


2015 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 538-544
Author(s):  
Ivana Safrankova ◽  
Kolackova P ◽  
Rutivckova G

Milk thistle is grown in the Czech Republic as a medicinal herb; silymarin is isolated from its achenes and used for the production of liver and gallbladder medicine. The quality and content of the active compound is influenced not only by environmental factors, but also by pests and pathogens. The occurrence of pests of milk thistle variety Silyb was observed in two localities during the years 2011 2013. In the year 2011 the mycoflora of seeds of four milk thistle varieties was determined. Representatives of 15 species were isolated from the seeds, most of them saprophytic. 21 fungal species were isolated and identified from milk thistle plants during the vegetation; Septoria silybi among the most important ones. Possibilities of protection of milt thistle against pathogens are discussed.


2010 ◽  
Vol 45 (Special Issue) ◽  
pp. S41-S47 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Lebeda ◽  
B. Sedláková ◽  
E. Křístková ◽  
M. Vysoudil

Two ectoparasite powdery mildew species <i>Golovinomyces cichoracearum</i> (<i>Gc</i>) and <i>Podosphaera xanthii</i> (<i>Px</i>) occurring on cucurbits differ, besides other characteristics, by specific ecologic requirements. While <i>Px</i> is common in subtropical and tropical areas and greenhouse crops, <i>Gc</i> occurs more frequently in temperate and cooler areas under field conditions. Their presence on cucurbit field crops (<i>Cucurbita pepo</i>, <i>C. maxima</i>, <i>Cucumis sativus</i>) was monitored in the Czechoslovakia (1979–1980) and in the Czech Republic (1995–2007). Their identification was carried out by microscopic observation of the morphological characteristics of the dry conidia on 1527 leaf samples. Data on air temperature in 1979–2007 were provided by the Czech Hydrometeorological Institute. In 1979–1980 <i>Gc</i> was identified in 86.0% of samples, <i>Px</i> in 14.0% samples, there was no mixed infection; prevalence of <i>Px</i> was recorded in South Slovakia and South Moravia, and on crops under cover. Since 1995 species <i>Px</i> was recorded each year on field crops in different locations of Bohemia and Moravia, usually in mixed infection with <i>Gc</i>. The average year temperature of 8.1°C for period 1992–2007 was higher than corresponding value of 7.4°C in 1979–1983. Similarly, average temperature in vegetation season of 16.2°C in 1992–2007 was higher than corresponding value of 15.7°C in 1979–1983. The higher air temperature can positively influence spreading of <i>Px</i> in the Czech Republic. Climate variability and effect of their changes are discussed in relationship to the geographic distribution and geographic patterns of cucurbit powdery mildews.


Plant Disease ◽  
1997 ◽  
Vol 81 (7) ◽  
pp. 809-816 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. J. Kaiser ◽  
B.-C. Wang ◽  
J. D. Rogers

Isolates of Ascochyta fabae from faba bean (Vicia faba) and A. lentis from lentil (Lens culinaris) collected from different countries were used in this study. The Didymella teleomorph (sexual state) of each fungus was induced to develop and mature on inoculated sterile lentil stems. Both fungi were heterothallic, with two mating types, designated MAT1-1 and MAT1-2. When certain isolates of A. fabae and A. lentis were crossed, hybrid pseudothecia developed. Growth, sporulation, colony appearance, morphology, and pathogenicity of the hybrid progeny frequently differed greatly from the parent isolates. Inoculations with single-ascospore progeny from matings among compatible isolates of A. fabae caused disease in faba bean but not in lentil; inoculations with single-ascospore progeny from matings among compatible isolates of A. lentis incited disease in lentil but not in faba bean. Inoculations with single-ascospore progeny from crosses between faba bean and lentil isolates did not induce disease in either host. Asci from crosses between A. fabae and A. lentis mostly contained fewer than eight ascospores that were, on average, larger than those from eight-spored asci. Matings among certain isolates of A. fabae resulted in production of pseudothecia with ascospores considerably larger than is typical for D. fabae. Random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) banding patterns of Ascochyta isolates from faba bean and lentil are clearly different, and banding patterns from hybrid progeny from crosses between A. fabae and A. lentis confirmed hybridity. RAPD markers proved useful in supporting identifications of ascospore isolates from faba bean to known Ascochyta species. Dendrogram analysis indicated similarity between the two fungal species was low. The pathogenicity tests, morphological characteristics, and RAPD markers indicate that A. fabae and A. lentis represent distinct taxa. D. lentis, with its anamorph, A. lentis, is proposed as a new species that is distinct from D. fabae, with its anamorph, A. fabae.


Plant Disease ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 97 (9) ◽  
pp. 1249-1249 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Víchová ◽  
B. Jílková ◽  
R. Pokorný

Gooseberry (Ribes uva-crispa L.) is a commonly grown fruit tree or bush in the Czech Republic. Colletotrichum acutatum J. H. Simmonds is a polyphagous fungal plant pathogen. This pathogen has been reported causing anthracnose on strawberry in the Czech Republic (2), and recently it has become an important pathogen on the fruits of apple and tomato (4). In 2012, anthracnose symptoms were noticed on fruits of gooseberry (locality Pribyslavice, near Brno). The symptoms on fruit surfaces were round, brown, shriveled, sunken spots of 1.2 to 2.0 cm, with orange conidial masses on the spots. The pathogen was isolated from symptomatic fruits on PDA and cultured at 25 ± 2°C. The color of colonies varied with age from white to gray with occurrence of orange conidial masses. Conidia were colorless and fusiform, size 13 to 17 × 4 to 5 μm (n = 100). The morphological characteristics classified the pathogen as a Colletotrichum sp. To fulfill Koch's postulates, 25 disinfested healthy gooseberry fruits were pinpricked by sterile needle and 10 μl of spore suspension (1 × 105 conidia ml–1) was inoculated by pipetting into the wound. Control fruits were treated with sterile distilled water. The fruits were transferred to a growth cabinet and maintained at a temperature of 25 ± 2°C, relative humidity 70 ± 5%. Similar anthracnose symptoms were observed on all of gooseberry fruits a week after inoculation, whereas no symptoms appeared on control fruits. The pathogen was reisolated from infected fruits. Species determination of the isolates was confirmed by PCR. Specific primers designed in region ITS1, the 5.8S RNA gene, and region ITS2 of the pathogen DNA were selected. Specific primers CaInt2 and ITS4 were used to identify C. acutatum (3), and primers CgInt and ITS4 were used to determine C. gloeosporioides isolate CCM 177 (1), which was used as a control. Our isolates yielded PCR products (size 490 bp) only with primers designed for C. acutatum. The C. gloeosporioides isolate yielded PCR product (size 450 bp) only with CgInt and ITS4 primers. PCR products were sequenced and identified with the BLAST program. The sequence of the gooseberry fruit isolates (Accession No. JX843763 and JX843764) matched with 100% similarity to the C. acutatum sequences in GenBank. To our knowledge, this is the first report of C. acutatum sensu lato on gooseberry fruits in the Czech Republic. This pathogen can endanger the production of gooseberry fruits in this region. References: (1) P. R. Mills et al. FEMS Microbiol. Lett., 98:137, 1992. (2) D. Novotný et al. Plant Dis. 91:1516, 2007. (3) S. Sreenivasaprasad et al. Plant Pathol. 45:650, 1996. (4) J. Víchová et al. Plant Dis. 96:769, 2012.


Plant Disease ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 103 (4) ◽  
pp. 691-696 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeannette Guajardo ◽  
Sebastián Saa ◽  
Natalia Riquelme ◽  
Gregory Browne ◽  
Cristian Youlton ◽  
...  

English (Persian) walnut (Juglans regia) trees affected by root and crown rot were surveyed in five regions of central Chile between 2015 and 2017. In each region, nine orchards, ranging from 1 to 21 years old, were randomly selected and inspected for incidence and severity of tree decline associated with crown and root rot. Soil and symptomatic crown and root tissues were collected and cultured in P5ARP semiselective medium to isolate potential oomycete pathogens, which were identified through morphology and molecularly using ITS sequences in the rDNA gene and beta tubulin gene. The most frequently isolated species was Phytophthora cinnamomi. Pathogenicity tests were conducted with representative oomycete isolates. P. cinnamomi, P. citrophthora, and Pythium ultimum were all pathogenic in J. regia. Nevertheless, only P. cinnamomi and P. citrophthora were pathogenic to English walnut. Py. ultimum caused limited levels of root damage to English walnut seedlings. Our research indicates that as the Chilean walnut industry has expanded, so have walnut crown and root rots induced by oomycetes.


Plant Disease ◽  
2002 ◽  
Vol 86 (6) ◽  
pp. 599-602 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Belisario ◽  
M. Maccaroni ◽  
L. Corazza ◽  
V. Balmas ◽  
A. Valier

In 1998, a severe fruit drop was observed in Italy, principally on cv. Lara Persian (English) walnut (Juglans regia). Dropped fruit showed a brown patch at the blossom end and blackening and rot of inner tissues. The disease, called brown apical necrosis (BAN), was investigated on fruit collected in Italy and France in 1999. In 2000, studies were carried out in three walnut orchards located in Italy and in France to substantiate the etiology of BAN. Isolations performed from inner diseased fruit tissues yielded several fungi, in decreasing frequency of isolation: species of Fusarium and Alternaria, and one species each of Cladosporium, Colletotrichum, and Phomopsis. However, only Fusarium spp. were recovered from stigmas of BAN-affected fruit. The fungi associated with BAN-diseased fruit and species composition differed among locations and over time, confirming results obtained in previous investigations. The species of Fusarium used in pathogenicity tests reproduced BAN-disease symptoms when inoculated on fruit, whereas an Alternaria alternata isolate caused only limited necrosis of the style. However, the role of the other fungi commonly isolated from BAN-diseased fruit remains to be defined. The walnut blight pathogen, Xanthomonas arboricola pv. juglandis, occasionally was isolated from BAN-diseased fruit. No correlation was found between the extent of external brown patches and the size of inner lesions. Repeated isolations from and inoculations of fruit demonstrated that BAN can be considered a complex disease, and the inner infections originate from the style of the fruit.


Plant Disease ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 92 (10) ◽  
pp. 1473-1473
Author(s):  
K. Cerny ◽  
M. Malinova ◽  
M. Tomsovsky ◽  
V. Strnadova ◽  
V. Holub ◽  
...  

During 2007 and the spring of 2008, a disease of poplars (Populus spp.) resembling the Dothichiza canker was found in plantations of fast-growing trees in central Bohemia and in southern Moravia where it was more abundant. The yellowish brown-to-brown, round or elongated cankers occurred on damaged shoots and twigs. Tissues directly under the bark were discolored and turned black. As the cankers enlarged, infected shoots and twigs died after several months. Small, black, gregarious pycnidia were observed under the bark or in lenticels after several weeks. The disease occurred on Populus nigra, P. × euroamericana cvs. Regenerata, Robusta, Brabantica, Spreewald, CZ-425/58, Blanc du Poitou, and Flaschlanden, and other Populus spp. Isolates of a species of Phoma were acquired by culturing damaged tissues on agar plates containing 3% oatmeal agar (OA) and 2% malt agar. Initial identification of the isolates was done by cultural and morphological characteristics (1). Colonies were floccose, aerial mycelium was olivaceous gray to gray, reverse olivaceous gray sometimes with darker tones at the margins or in the colony center, and NaOH reaction was negative. The growth rate was 42 to 56 in diameter after 7 days at 20°C on OA (optimum temperature for growth was 22°C with a minimum of 1°C and a maximum of 28 to 29°C). Pycnidia in culture scattered, were globose or subglobose, obviously with one nonpapillate ostiolum, olivaceous black or black, 120 to 370 μm in diameter, and conidial exudate was whitish. Phialides were globose to ampulliform and 3 to 7 × 3 to 6 μm. Conidia were hyaline, ellipsoidal, often guttulate, 3.1 to 7.8 × 1.9 to 3.1 μm, and L/B ratio 1.4:3.1. Septate conidia occurred only on natural substrate up to 10.6 × 3.9 μm. Morphological and cultural characteristics resembled those of P. exiqua var. populi Gruyter & P. Scheer (1). The internal transcribed spacer (ITS) sequence (GenBank Accession No EU562206) for the representative isolate (CCF No 3759) confirmed 100% identity to P. exigua. Pathogenicity was confirmed with 1-year-old P. nigra plants during a 2-month greenhouse experiment at 15 to 20°C. Fifteen replicate plants were wounded (5-mm diameter), inoculated with 5-mm OA plugs from actively growing colonies (isolate CCF No 3759), and sealed by Parafilming. An additional 15 control plants following wounding were inoculated with a sterile agar plug. After 3 to 4 weeks, yellowish or brownish necrotic lesions ranging from 1 to 1.5 cm long developed on all inoculated plants. The pathogen was successfully reisolated from lesions and the control plants were asymptomatic. P. exigua var. populi is considered an opportunistic poplar and willow pathogen (2) that becomes more important in winter (1). The pathogen potentially invades host tissues damaged by frost, sun scald, or weakened by excessive transpiration during sunny winter days. To our knowledge, this is the first record of the pathogen on poplars in the Czech Republic, which may have an economic impact on short-rotation coppice plantations. References: (1) J. de Gruyter and P. Scheer. J. Phytopathol. 146:411, 1998. (2) H. A. van der Aa et al. Persoonia 17:435, 2000.


MycoKeys ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 55 ◽  
pp. 1-14 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lin Zhao ◽  
Jing Cai ◽  
Wei He ◽  
Ying Zhang

Blueberries (Vacciniumspp.) have been widely cultivated in China because of their nutritional benefits and economic value. Blueberry stem blight has become one of the most severe diseases influencing blueberry productivity and quality in China. In this study, eight fungal isolates were obtained from twenty stem blight lesions of blueberry collected in Nanping, Fujian province, China. Asexual stage was observed after inducing sporulation, the morphology of which agrees withMacrophominain the black, smooth, hard sclerotia and ellipsoid to obovoid, smooth hyaline conidia with apical sheath. Furthermore, DNA sequences of concatenated ITS,tef1-α,TUB, andACTloci indicated that these isolates belong to a novel fungal species. The distinguishing morphological characteristics, such as the wider conidia and larger conidiomata pycnidial, also support its new status. Thus a novel fungus,Macrophominavaccinii, was described in this study. Pathogenicity tests indicated thatM.vacciniicould cause stem blight of blueberry.


Author(s):  
Pavla Koláčková ◽  
Gabriela Růžičková ◽  
Ivana Šafránková ◽  
Karel Hron ◽  
Klára Hrůzová

The aim of this work was to evaluate the growth dynamics and selected morphological characteristics of genetic sources of milk thistle (Silybum marianum L. Gaertn.) for the further development of the minimal set of descriptors. Milk thistle is grown in the Czech Republic for its achenes; however, the quality of achenes can be reduced by many factors, by the occurrence of fungal pathogens mainly. The growth dynamics and morphological characteristics of milk thistle during the vegetation period in the years 2010–2013 at two localities were evaluated. The cluster analysis of the data showed the similarity for some of the accessions and confirmed the dependence of the data value to the climatic conditions. Source from Serbia, Slovakia, Romanian variety ’De Prahova’, German accessions SIL 2 and SIL 8, Hungarian accesion RCAT 040360 DDR and Czech variety ’Silyb’ seem to be promising genetic sources from the viewpoint of growth and development in the Czech Republic.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document