scholarly journals Nigrospora oryzae Causing Leaf Spot on Asiatic Dayflower in Chongqing, China

Plant Disease ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chaodong Qiu ◽  
Wenhui Zhu ◽  
Taotao Niu ◽  
Zhenyu Liu

Asiatic dayflower (Commelina communis L.) is an annual herbaceous weed that is distributed throughout China. A foliar disease on Asiatic dayflowers was discovered in one farm field in Dianjiang County, Chongqing, China (N30°3´22″, E107°18´5″) in summer, 2019. The disease incidence was observed on about 10% (13/127) of the plants. Symptoms appeared as round-shaped tan lesions (2-5 mm) in diameter that occurred randomly and irregularly on the whole leaves. The centers of lesions become grayish white with reddish borders as the disease progressed. The leaves with typical symptoms were detached and wiped with 70% ethanol for surface disinfestation before isolating the causal agent. Subsequently, three pieces (3-4 mm2) of tissue were taken from the margin of the leaf lesion, disinfested in 1.5% NaClO for 1 min, rinsed 3 times in sterilized distilled water, and placed onto Potato Dextrose Agar (PDA) medium containing 50 μg/ml each of kanamycin and ampicillin. A fungus was exclusively and consistently isolated from the disinfested leaf lesion sections. The colonies on PDA grew rapidly and covered the entire petri dish within 5 days at 28℃. Colonies were at first grayish white, cotton wool-like, round, with abundant aerial mycelium, and later turned black as conidia produced. The abundant conidia formed on PDA were initially yellow brown and gradually became black, oblate to ellipsoidal, smooth, single-celled, and ranged in size from 4 to 10 × 3.5 to 9 μm. They were borne on a colorless, hyaline, and inverted flask-shaped cell at the tip of each conidiophore. The morphology characteristics were consistent with those of Nigrospora spp. (Wang et al. 2017). Genomic DNA was extracted from one representative isolate NDJ0819. The amplification and sequencing of the gene fragments including the internal transcribed space (ITS) region of ribosomal DNA and beta-tubulin were performed using the primers ITS1/ITS4 (White et al. 1990) and Bt2a/Bt2b (Glass and Donaldson 1995), respectively. Fragments of 536 bp for ITS and 408 bp for beta-tubulin were obtained. A phylogram of the combined ITS and beta-tubulin sequences reconstructed using the maximum likelihood bootstrapping method implemented in the software MEGA version 7.0 (Kumar et al. 2016) indicated that isolate NDJ0819 clustered with Nigrospora oryzae. Both ITS and beta-tubulin sequences were deposited into GenBank (accession no. MT140353 and MT157509, respectively). Pathogenicity test was performed by rub-inoculating needle-wounded leaves of three 4-week-old Asiatic dayflowers with spore suspension (2.6 × 106 conidia/ml) of NDJ0819 prepared in water containing 0.05% Tween-20, and holding plants at 28℃ in the growth chamber. The pathogenicity test was repeated twice. Brown, round-shaped lesions developed on leaves inoculated with spores at 15 days post-inoculation. However, the centers of the lesion did not become grayish white, compared to those of lesions seen in naturally infected leaves. No symptoms developed on leaves inoculated with sterilized distilled water. N. oryzae was re-isolated from the lesions. All results described above indicated that N. oryzae was responsible for the leaf spot of Asiatic dayflower. To our knowledge, this is the first report of N. oryzae causing leaf spot on Asiatic dayflower in China. Research into the potential use of N. oryzae as a candidate biological agent against the weed is worth being initiated.

Plant Disease ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 97 (7) ◽  
pp. 992-992 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y. L. Li ◽  
Z. Zhou ◽  
W. Lu ◽  
J. R. Ye

Sansevieria trifasciata originates from tropical West Africa. It is widely planted as a potted ornamental in China for improving indoor air quality (1). In February 2011, leaves of S. trifasciata plants in an ornamental market of Anle, Luoyang City, China, were observed with sunken brown lesions up to 20 mm in diameter, and with black pycnidia present in the lesions. One hundred potted plants were examined, with disease incidence at 20%. The symptomatic leaves affected the ornamental value of the plants. A section of leaf tissue from the periphery of two lesions from a plant was cut into 1 cm2 pieces, soaked in 70% ethanol for 30 s, sterilized with 0.1% HgCl2 for 2 min, then washed five times in sterilized distilled water. The pieces were incubated at 28°C on potato dextrose agar (PDA). Colonies of two isolates were brown with submerged hyphae, and aerial mycelium was rare. Abundant and scattered pycnidia were reniform, dark brown, and 200 to 350 × 100 to 250 μm. There were two types of setae on the pycnidia: 1) dark brown setae with inward curved tops, and 2) straight, brown setae. Conidia were hyaline, unicellular, cylindrical, and 3.75 to 6.25 × 1.25 to 2.50 μm. Morphological characteristics suggested the two fungal isolates were a Chaetomella sp. To confirm pathogenicity, six mature leaves of a potted S. trifasciata plant were wounded with a sterile pin after wiping each leaf surface with 70% ethanol and washing each leaf with sterilized distilled water three times. A 0.5 cm mycelial disk cut from the margin of a 5-day-old colony on a PDA plate was placed on each pin-wounded leaf, ensuring that the mycelium was in contact with the wound. Non-colonized PDA discs were placed on pin-wounded leaves as the control treatment. Each of two fungal isolates was inoculated on two leaves, and the control treatment was done similarly on two leaves. The inoculated plant was placed in a growth chamber at 28°C with 80% relative humidity. After 7 days, inoculated leaves produced brown lesions with black pycnidia, but no symptoms developed on the control leaves. A Chaetomella sp. was reisolated from the lesions of inoculated leaves, but not from the control leaves. An additional two potted plants were inoculated using the same methods as replications of the experiment, with identical results. To confirm the fungal identification, the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region of rDNA of the two isolates was amplified using primers ITS1 and ITS4 (2) and sequenced. The sequences were identical (GenBank Accession No. KC515097) and exhibited 99% nucleotide identity to the ITS sequence of an isolate of Chaetomella sp. in GenBank (AJ301961). To our knowledge, this is the first report of a leaf spot of S. trifasciata caused by Chaetomella sp. in China as well as anywhere in the world. References: (1) X. Z. Guo et al. Subtropical Crops Commun. Zhejiang 27:9, 2005. (2) T. J. White et al. PCR Protocols: A Guide to Methods and Applications. M. A. Innis et al., eds. Academic Press, San Diego, CA, 1990.


Plant Disease ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yue Tian ◽  
Yingying Zhang ◽  
Chaodong Qiu ◽  
Zhenyu Liu

Weigela florida (Bunge) A. DC. is a dense, rounded, deciduous shrub commonly planted in landscapes. It is also used in Chinese medicine to treat sore throat, erysipelas, cold, and fever (Zheng et al. 2019). In May 2019, leaf spots were observed on approximately 50% of W. florida plants grown in the Wisdom Plaza Park of Anhui Agricultural University in Hefei, Anhui Province, China. Leaf spots begun as small light brown and irregular lesions, enlarged, turned reddish brown, coalesced to form large blighted areas, and eventually covered the entire leaf surface. Five pieces of tissues were removed from the lesion margins of each diseased leaf (five leaves from five different plants), chopped into several 3-4 mm2 pieces, disinfected with 1.5% NaOCl for 2 min, rinsed 3 times with sterile distilled water for 1 min, plated onto Potato Dextrose Agar (PDA) medium containing 50 μg/ml of ampicillin and kanamycin, and incubated at 25°C with a 12-hour photoperiod for 5 days. One segment of the fungal growth from the growing edge of the colony was transferred onto a fresh PDA plate for purification and incubated under the same conditions for another 5 days. The colony morphology of one representative isolate (AAU0519) was characterized by a pale orange cushion in the center surrounded by irregular pink margin, diffusing red orange pigments into the PDA medium. Isolate AAU0519 was cultured on PDA medium for 7 days at 25°C in the dark to induce sporulation. The produced conidia were globose, subglobose to pyriform, golden brown to brown, and with a diameter of 7.7 - 23.8 μm. Both cultural and morphological characteristics suggested that isolate AAU0519 was an Epicoccum species, according to the description by Chen et al. 2017. Amplification and sequencing of the internal transcribed spacer (ITS), beta-tubulin, and 28S large subunit ribosomal RNA (LSU) gene fragments from the extracted genomic DNA of AAU0519 were performed using primer sets ITS1/ITS4 (White et al. 1990), Bt2a/Bt2b (Glass and Donaldson 1995), and LSU1Fd/LR5 (Crous et al. 2009; Vilgalys and Hester 1990), respectively. A phylogenetic tree was constructed by the maximum-likelihood method with 1,000 bootstrapping replications based on the concatenated ITS, beta-tubulin, and LSU sequences from isolate AAU0519 and representative strains of 22 species of the genus Epicoccum (Chen et al. 2017). Isolate AAU0519 clustered with ex-holotype CGMCC 3.18362 of Epicoccum layuense Qian Chen, Crous & L. Cai (Chen et al. 2017). All obtained sequences were deposited into GenBank under accession numbers MK983497 (ITS), MN328723 (beta-tubulin), and MN328724 (LSU). A pathogenicity test was conducted on leaves of five 3-year-old W. florida cultivar “Red Prince” planted in the field (five leaves for each treatment and control per plant) by spraying 30 ml of a spore suspension (106 spores/ml) of isolate AAU0519 as treatment or sterilized distilled water as control. Before the inoculation, the leaves were disinfected with 70% ethanol. After inoculation, the leaves were wrapped with a plastic bag to keep high relative humidity. The average air temperature was about 28°C during the period of pathogenicity test. The experiment was repeated once. Ten days after inoculation, the fungal-inoculated leaves developed light brown lesions resembling those of naturally infected leaves, control leaves did not develop any symptoms. E. layuense was recovered from leaf lesions and its identity was confirmed by morphological and sequence analyses as described above. To our knowledge, E. layuense has been previously reported as a pathogen of Perilla sp. (Chen et al. 2017), oat (Avena sativa) (Chen et al. 2019), and tea (Camellia sinensis) plants (Chen et al. 2020), but this is the first report of E. layuense causing leaf spot on W. florida in China. This pathogen could pose a threat to the ornamental value of W. florida plants. Thus, it is necessary to adopt effective management strategies against leaf spot on W. florida.


Plant Disease ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yujie Zhang ◽  
Wenxiu Sun ◽  
Ping Ning ◽  
Tangxun Guo ◽  
SuiPing Huang ◽  
...  

Papaya (Carica papaya L.) is a rosaceous plant widely grown in China, which is economically important. Anthracnose caused by Colletotrichum sp. is an important postharvest disease, which severely affects the quality of papaya fruits (Liu et al., 2019). During April 2020, some mature papaya fruits with typical anthracnose symptoms were observed in Fusui, Nanning, Guangxi, China with an average of 30% disease incidence (DI) and over 60% DI in some orchards. Initial symptoms of these papayas appeared as watery lesions, which turned dark brown, sunken, with a conidial mass appearing on the lesions under humid and warm conditions. The disease severity varied among fruits, with some showing tiny light brown spots, and some ripe fruits presenting brownish, rounded, necrotic and depressed lesions over part of their surface. Samples from two papaya plantations (107.54°E, 22.38°N) were collected, and brought to the laboratory. Symptomatic diseased tissues were cut into 5 × 5 mm pieces, surface sterilized with 2% (v/v) sodium hypochlorite for 1 minute, and rinsed three times with sterilized water. The pieces were then placed on potato dextrose agar (PDA). After incubation at 25°C in the dark for one week, colonies with uniform morphology were obtained. The aerial mycelium on PDA was white on top side, and concentric rings of salmon acervuli on the underside. A gelatinous layer of spores was observed on part of PDA plates after 7 days at 28°C. The conidia were elliptical, aseptate and hyaline (Zhang et al., 2020). The length and width of 60 conidia were measured for each of the two representative isolates, MG2-1 and MG3-1, and these averaged 13.10 × 5.11 μm and 14.45 × 5.95 μm. DNA was extracted from mycelia of these two isolates with the DNA secure Plant Kit (TIANGEN, Biotech, China). The internal transcribed spacer (ITS), partial actin (ACT), calmodulin (CAL), chitin synthase (CHS), β-tubulin 2 (TUB2) and glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) regions were amplified by PCR and sequenced. The sequences were deposited into GenBank with accessions MT904003, MT904004, and MT898650 to MT898659. BLASTN analyses against the GenBank database showed that they all had over 99% identity to the type strain of Colletotrichum siamense isolate ICMP 18642 (GenBank accession numbers JX010278, GQ856775, JX009709, GQ856730, JX010410, JX010019) (Weir et al., 2012). A phylogenetic tree based on the combined ITS, ACT, CAL, CHS, TUB2 and GAPDH sequences using the Neighbor-joining algorithm also showed that the isolates were C. siamense. Pathogenicity tests were conducted on 24 mature, healthy and surface-sterilized papaya fruits. On 12 papaya fruits, three well separated wounded sites were made for inoculation, and for each wounded site, six adjacent pinhole wounds were made in a 5-mm-diameter circular area using a sterilized needle. A 10 µl aliquot of 1 × 106 conidia/ml suspension of each of the isolates (MG2-1 and MG3-1) was inoculated into each wound. For each isolate, there were six replicate fruits. The control fruits were inoculated with sterile distilled water. The same inoculation was applied to 12 non-wound papaya fruits. Fruits were then placed in boxes which were first washed with 75% alcohol and lined with autoclaved filter paper moistened with sterilized distilled water to maintain high humidity. The boxes were then sealed and incubated at 28°C. After 10 days, all the inoculated fruits showed symptoms, while the fruits that were mock inoculated were without symptoms. Koch's postulates were fulfilled by re-isolation of C. siamense from diseased fruits. To our knowledge, this is the first report of C. siamense causing anthracnose of papaya in China. This finding will enable better control of anthracnose disease caused by C. siamense on papaya.


Plant Disease ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 95 (7) ◽  
pp. 874-874 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y. M. Shen ◽  
C. H. Chao ◽  
H. L. Liu

Gynura bicolor (Roxb. ex Willd.) DC., known as Okinawa spinach or hong-feng-cai, is a commonly consumed vegetable in Asian countries. In May 2010, plants with blight and wilt symptoms were observed in commercial vegetable farms in Changhua, Taiwan. Light brown-to-black blight lesions developed from the top of the stems to the petioles and extended to the base of the leaves. Severely infected plants declined and eventually died. Disease incidence was approximately 20%. Samples of symptomatic tissues were surface sterilized in 0.6% NaOCl and plated on water agar. A Phytophthora sp. was consistently isolated and further plated on 10% unclarified V8 juice agar, with daily radial growths of 7.6, 8.6, 5.7, and 2.4 mm at 25, 30, 35, and 37°C, respectively. Four replicates were measured for each temperature. No hyphal growth was observed at 39°C. Intercalary hyphal swellings and proliferating sporangia were produced in culture plates flooded with sterile distilled water. Sporangia were nonpapillate, obpyriform to ellipsoid, base tapered or rounded, and 43.3 (27.5 to 59.3) × 27.6 (18.5 to 36.3) μm. Clamydospores and oospores were not observed. Oospores were present in dual cultures with an isolate of P. nicotianae (p731) (1) A2 mating type, indicating that the isolate was heterothallic. A portion of the internal transcribed spacer sequence was deposited in GenBank (Accession No. HQ717146). The sequence was 99% identical to that of P. drechsleri SCRP232 (ATCC46724) (3), a type isolate of the species. The pathogen was identified as P. drechsleri Tucker based on temperature growth, morphological characteristics, and ITS sequence homology (3). To evaluate pathogenicity, the isolated P. drechsleri was inoculated on greenhouse-potted G. bicolor plants. Inoculum was obtained by grinding two dishes of the pathogen cultured on potato dextrose agar (PDA) with sterile distilled water in a blender. After filtering through a gauze layer, the filtrate was aliquoted to 240 ml. The inoculum (approximately 180 sporangia/ml) was sprayed on 24 plants of G. bicolor. An equal number of plants treated with sterile PDA processed in the same way served as controls. After 1 week, incubation at an average temperature of 29°C, blight and wilt symptoms similar to those observed in the fields appeared on 12 inoculated plants. The pathogen was reisolated from the lesions of diseased stems and leaves, fulfilling Koch's postulates. The controls remained symptomless. The pathogenicity test was repeated once with similar results. G. bicolor in Taiwan has been recorded to be infected by P. cryptogea (1,2), a species that resembles P. drechsleri. The recorded isolates of P. cryptogea did not have a maximal growth temperature at or above 35°C (1,2), a distinctive characteristic to discriminate between the two species (3). To our knowledge, this is the first report of P. drechsleri being associated with stem and foliar blight of G. bicolor. References: (1) P. J. Ann. Plant Pathol. Bull. 5:146, 1996. (2) H. H. Ho et al. The Genus Phytophthora in Taiwan. Institute of Botany, Academia Sinica, Taipei, 1995. (3) R. Mostowfizadeh-Ghalamfarsa et al. Fungal Biol. 114:325, 2010.


Plant Disease ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 98 (11) ◽  
pp. 1580-1580 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. Kithan ◽  
L. Daiho

Etlingera linguiformis (Roxb.) R.M.Sm. of Zingiberaceae family is an important indigenous medicinal and aromatic plant of Nagaland, India, that grows well in warm climates with loamy soil rich in humus (1). The plant rhizome has medicinal benefits in treating sore throats, stomachache, rheumatism, and respiratory complaints, while its essential oil is used in perfumery. A severe disease incidence of leaf blight was observed on the foliar portion of E. linguiformis at the Patkai mountain range of northeast India in September 2012. Initial symptoms of the disease are small brown water soaked flecks appearing on the upper leaf surface with diameter ranging from 0.5 to 3 cm, which later coalesced to form dark brown lesions with a well-defined border. Lesions often merged to form large necrotic areas, covering more than 90% of the leaf surface, which contributed to plant death. The disease significantly reduces the number of functional leaves. As disease progresses, stems and rhizomes were also affected, reducing quality and yield. The diseased leaf tissues were surface sterilized with 0.2% sodium hypochlorite for 2 min followed by rinsing in sterile distilled water and transferred into potato dextrose agar (PDA) medium. After 3 days, the growing tips of the mycelium were transferred to PDA slants and incubated at 25 ± 2°C until conidia formation. Fungal colonies on PDA were dark gray to dark brown, usually zonate; stromata regularly and abundantly formed in culture. Conidia were straight to curved, ellipsoidal, 3-septate, rarely 4-septate, middle cells broad and darker than other two end cells, middle septum not median, smooth, 18 to 32 × 8 to 16 μm (mean 25.15 × 12.10 μm). Conidiophores were terminal and lateral on hyphae and stromata, simple or branched, straight or flexuous, often geniculate, septate, pale brown to brown, smooth, and up to 800 μm thick (2,3). Pathogen identification was performed by the Indian Type Culture Collection, Division of Plant Pathology, Indian Agricultural Research Institute, New Delhi (ITCC Accession No. 7895.10). Further molecular identity of the pathogen was confirmed as Curvularia aeria by PCR amplification and sequencing of the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) regions of the ribosomal DNA by using primers ITS4 and ITS5 (4). The sequence was submitted to GenBank (Accession No. MTCC11875). BLAST analysis of the fungal sequence showed 100% nucleotide similarity with Cochliobolus lunatus and Curvularia aeria. Pathogenicity tests were performed by spraying with an aqueous conidial suspension (1 × 106 conidia /ml) on leaves of three healthy Etlingera plants. Three plants sprayed with sterile distilled water served as controls. The first foliar lesions developed on leaves 7 days after inoculation and after 10 to 12 days, 80% of the leaves were severely infected. Control plants remained healthy. The inoculated leaves developed similar blight symptoms to those observed on naturally infected leaves. C. aeria was re-isolated from the inoculated leaves, thus fulfilling Koch's postulates. The pathogenicity test was repeated twice. To our knowledge, this is the first report of the presence of C. aeria on E. linguiformis. References: (1) M. H. Arafat et al. Pharm. J. 16:33, 2013. (2) M. B. Ellis. Dematiaceous Hyphomycetes. CMI, Kew, Surrey, UK, 1971. (3) K. J. Martin and P. T. Rygiewicz. BMC Microbiol. 5:28, 2005. (4) C. V. Suberamanian. Proc. Indian Acad. Sci. 38:27, 1955.


Plant Disease ◽  
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Boda Praveen ◽  
A. Nagaraja ◽  
M. K. Prasanna Kumar ◽  
Devanna Pramesh ◽  
K. B. Palanna ◽  
...  

Little millet (LM) is a minor cereal crop grown in the Indian sub-continent. During October 2018, dark brown, circular to oval necrotic spots surrounded by concentric rings were observed on the upper leaf surface of the LM (cv. VS-13) grown in the fields of the University of Agricultural Sciences, Bengaluru, India (13.0784oN, 77.5793oE). As the disease progressed, infected leaves became blighted. Disease incidence up to 53% was recorded in 3 fields of 0.4-hectare area each. Thirty symptomatic leaves were collected to isolate the associated causal organism. The margins of diseased tissue were cut into 5 × 5-mm pieces, surface-sterilized in 75% ethanol for 45 seconds followed by 1% sodium hypochlorite for 1 min, finally rinsed in sterile distilled water five times and placed on PDA. After 7 days of incubation at 25°C, greyish fungal colonies appeared on PDA. Single-spore isolations were performed to obtain ten isolates. Pure cultures of the fungus initially produced light gray aerial mycelia that later turned to dark grey. All isolates formed obclavate to pyriform conidia measured 22.66-48.97μm long and 6.55-13.79µm wide with 1-3 longitudinal and 2-7 transverse septa with a short beak (2.55-13.26µm) (n=50). Based on the conidial morphology, the fungus was identified as Alternaria sp. Further, the taxonomic identity of all ten isolates was confirmed as A. alternata using species-specific primers (AAF2/AAR3, Konstantinova et al. 2002) in a PCR assay. Later, one of the isolate UASB1 was selected, and its internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region, glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (gapdh), major allergen Alt a 1 (Alt a 1), major endo-polygalacturonase (endoPG), OPA10-2, and KOG1058 genes were amplified in PCR (White et al. 1990; Berbee et al. 1999; Woudenberg et al. 2015), and the resultant products were sequenced and deposited in the NCBI GenBank (ITS, MN919390; gapdh, MT637185; Alt a 1, MT882339; endoPG, MT882340; OPA10-2, MT882341; KOG1058, MT882342). Blastn analysis of ITS, gapdh, Alt a 1, endoPG, OPA10-2, KOG1058 gene sequences showed 99.62% (with AF347031), 97.36% (with AY278808), 99.58% (with AY563301), 99.10% (with JQ811978), 99.05% (with KP124632) and 99.23% (with KP125233) respectively, identity with reference strain CBS916.96 of A. alternata, confirming UASB1 isolate to be A. alternata. For pathogenicity assay, conidial suspension of UASB1 isolate was spray inoculated to ten healthy LM (cv. VS-13) plants (45 days old) maintained under protected conditions. The spore suspension was sprayed until runoff on healthy leaves, and ten healthy plants sprayed with sterile water served as controls. Later, all inoculated and control plants were covered with transparent polyethylene bags and were maintained in a greenhouse at 28±2 ◦C and 90% RH. The pathogenicity test was repeated three times. After 8 days post-inoculation, inoculated plants showed leaf blight symptoms as observed in the field, whereas no disease symptoms were observed on non-inoculated plants. Re-isolations were performed from inoculated plants, and the re-isolated pathogen was confirmed as A. alternata based on morphological and PCR assay (Konstantinova et al. 2002). No pathogens were isolated from control plants. There is an increasing acreage of LM crop in India, and this first report indicates the need for further studies on leaf blight management and the disease impacts on crop yields.


Plant Disease ◽  
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Quan Shen ◽  
Xixu Peng ◽  
Feng He ◽  
Shaoqing Li ◽  
Zuyin Xiao ◽  
...  

Buckwheat (Fagopyrum tataricum) is a traditional short-season pseudocereal crop originating in southwest China and is cultivated around the world. Antioxidative substances in buckwheat have been shown to provide many potential cardiovascular health benefits. Between August and November in 2019, a leaf spot was found in several Tartary buckwheat cv. Pinku1 fields in Xiangxiang County, Hunan Province, China. The disease occurred throughout the growth cycle of buckwheat after leaves emerged, and disease incidence was approximately 50 to 60%. Initially infected leaves developed a few round lesions, light yellow to light brown spots. Several days later, lesions began to enlarge with reddish brown borders, and eventually withered and fell off. Thirty lesions (2×2 mm) collected from three locations with ten leaves in each location were sterilized in 70% ethanol for 10 sec, in 2% sodium hypochlorite for 30 sec, rinsed in sterile water for three times, dried on sterilized filter paper, and placed on a potato dextrose PDA with lactic acid (3 ml/L), and incubated at 28°C in the dark for 3 to 5 days. Fungal colonies were initially white and later turned black with the onset ofsporulation. Conidia were single-celled, black, smooth, spherical to subspherical, and measured 9.2 to 15.6 µm long, and 7.1 to 11.6 µm wide (n=30). Each conidium was terminal and borne on a hyaline vesicle at the tip of conidiophores. Morphologically, the fungus was identified as Nigrospora osmanthi (Wang et al. 2017). Identification was confirmed by amplifying and sequencing the ITS region, and translation elongation factor 1-alpha (TEF1-α) and partial beta-tublin (TUB2) genes using primers ITS1/ITS4 (Mills et al. 1992), EF1-728F/EF-2 (Carbone and Kohn 1999; O’Donnell et al. 1998) and Bt-2a/Bt-2b (Glass et al. 1995), respectively. BLAST searches in GenBank indicated the ITS (MT860338), TUB2 (MT882054) and TEF1-α (MT882055) sequences had 99.80%, 99% and 100% similarity to sequences KX986010.1, KY019461.1 and KY019421.1 of Nigrospora osmanthi ex-type strain CGMCC 3.18126, respectively. A neighbor-joining phylogenetic tree constructed using MEGA7.0 with 1,000 bootstraps based on the concatenated nucleotide sequences of the three genes indicated that our isolate was closely related to N. osmanthi. Pathogenicity test was performed using leaves of healthy F. tataricum plants. The conidial suspension (1 × 106 conidia/ml) collected from PDA cultures with 0.05% Tween 20 buffer was used for inoculation by spraying leaves of potted 20-day-old Tartary buckwheat cv. Pinku1. Five leaves of each plant were inoculated with spore suspensions (1 ml per leaf). An equal number of control leaves were sprayed with sterile water to serve as a control. The treated plants were kept in a greenhouse at 28°C and 80% relative humidity for 24 h, and then transferred to natural conditions with temperature ranging from 22 to 30°C and relative humidity ranging from 50 to 60%. Five days later, all N. osmanthi-inoculated leaves developed leaf spot symptoms similar to those observed in the field, whereas control leaves remained healthy. N. osmanthi was re-isolated from twelve infected leaves with frequency of 100%, fulfilling Koch’s postulates. The genus Nigrospora has been regarded by many scholars as plant pathogens (Fukushima et al. 1998) and N. osmanthi is a known leaf blight pathogen for Stenotaphrum secundatum (Mei et al. 2019) and Ficus pandurata (Liu et al. 2019) but has not been reported on F. tataricum. Nigrospora sphaerica was also detected in vegetative buds of healthy Fagopyrum esculentum Moench (Jain et al. 2012). To our knowledge, this is the first report of N. osmanthi causing leaf spot on F. tataricum in China and worldwide. Appropriate strategies should be developed to manage this disease.


Plant Disease ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 98 (2) ◽  
pp. 284-284 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Mahadevakumar ◽  
K. M. Jayaramaiah ◽  
G. R. Janardhana

Lablab purpureus (L.) Sweet (Indian bean) is an important pulse crop grown in arid and semi-arid regions of India. It is one of the most widely cultivated legume species and has multiple uses. During a September 2010 survey, we recorded a new leaf spot disease on L. purpureus in and around Mysore district (Karnataka state) with 40 to 80% disease incidence in 130 ha of field crop studied, which accounted for 20 to 35% estimated yield loss. The symptoms appeared as small necrotic spots on the upper leaf surface. The leaf spots were persistent under mild infection throughout the season with production of conidia in clusters on abaxial leaf surface. A Dueteromyceteous fungus was isolated from affected leaf tissues that were surface sterilized with 2% NaOCl2 solution then washed thrice, dried, inoculated on potato dextrose agar (PDA) medium, and incubated at 28 ± 2°C at 12 h alternate light and dark period for 7 days. The fungal colony with aerial mycelia interspersed with dark cushion-shaped sporodochia consists of short, compact conidiophores bearing large isodiametric, solitary, muricate, brown, globular to pear shaped conidia (29.43 to 23.92 μm). Fungal isolate was identified as Epicoccum sp. based on micro-morphological and cultural features (1). Further authenticity of the fungus was confirmed by PCR amplification of the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region using ITS1/ITS4 universal primer. The amplified PCR product was purified, sequenced directly, and BLASTn search revealed 100% homology to Epicoccum nigrum Link. (DQ093668.1 and JX914480.1). A representative sequence of E. nigrum was deposited in GenBank (Accession No. KC568289.1). The isolated fungus was further tested for its pathogenicity on 30-day-old healthy L. purpureus plants under greenhouse conditions. A conidial suspension (106 conidia/ml) was applied as foliar spray (three replicates of 15 plants each) along with suitable controls. The plants were kept under high humidity (80%) for 5 days and at ambient temperature (28 ± 2°C). The appearance of leaf spot symptoms were observed after 25 days post inoculation. Further, the pathogen was re-isolated and confirmed by micro-morphological characteristics. E. nigrum has been reported to cause post-harvest decay of cantaloupe in Oklahoma (2). It has also been reported as an endophyte (3). Occurrence as a pathogen on lablab bean has not been previously reported. To our knowledge, this is the first report of the occurrence of E. nigrum on L. purpureus in India causing leaf spot disease. References: (1) H. L. Barnet and B. B. Hunter. Page 150 in: Illustrated Genera of Imperfect Fungi, 1972. (2) B. D. Bruten et al. Plant Dis. 77:1060, 1993. (3) L. C. Fávaro et al. PLoS One 7(6):e36826, 2012.


Plant Disease ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ling Wang ◽  
S. L. Ge ◽  
Kehan Zhao ◽  
huang Shiwen

Rice (Oryza sativa L.) is the most important and widely grown crop, covering about 29.9 million ha of total cultivation area in China. In the last decade, spikelet rot disease on rice became much more frequent in the middle and lower reaches of the Yangtze River, China. Fusarium proliferatum (Matsush.) Nirenberg ex Gerlach & Nirenberg was reported to be a causal agent of spikelet rot on rice in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province (Huang et al. 2012). In September 2019, a survey was conducted to understand the etiology of the disease in the main rice growing regions of Jinshan District of Shanghai. Symptomatic panicles exhibiting reddish or brown discoloration on the glumes were collected from different rice fields, where disease incidence was estimated to be between 20 to 80%. Diseased glumes were cut into small sections (5 × 5 mm) from the boundary of necrotic and healthy tissues, surface-sterilized with 75% ethanol for 30 s and 3% sodium hypochlorite for 90 s, rinsed twice with sterile distilled water, then placed onto 1/5 strength potato dextrose agar (PDA). After 3 to 5 days of incubation at 28°C in the dark, fungal growth with Fusarium-like colonies were transferred to PDA and purified by the single-spore isolation method. A total of 12 isolates were obtained and colonies showed loosely floccose, white mycelium and pale-yellow pigmentation on PDA. Microconidia were ovoid mostly with 0 to 1 septum, and measured 4.2 to 16.6 × 2.5 to 4.1 μm (n = 50). After 5-7 days of inoculation on carnation leaf agar (CLA), macroconidia produced usually had 3 to 5 septa, slightly curved at the apex, ranging from 15.7 to 39.1 × 3.3 to 5.0 μm (n = 50). Chlamydospores were produced in hyphae, most often solitary in short chains or in clumps, ellipsoidal or subglobose with thick and roughened walls. Molecular identification was performed on the representative isolates (JS3, JS9, and JS21). The rDNA internal transcribed spacer (ITS), translation elongation factor (TEF-1α) and β-tubulin (β-TUB) genes were amplified and sequenced using the paired primers ITS1/ITS4 (White et al. 1990), EF1/EF2 (O’Donnell et al. 1998) and T1/T22 (O’Donnell and Cigelnik 1997), respectively. The obtained sequences were deposited in GenBank under accession numbers MT889972 to MT889974 (ITS), MT895844 to MT895846 (TEF-1α), and MT895841 to MT895843 (β-TUB), respectively. BLASTn search of the sequences revealed 99 to 100% identity with ITS (MF356578), TEF-1α (HM770725) and β-TUB (GQ915444) of Fusarium incarnatum isolates. FUSARIUM-ID (Geiser et al. 2004) analysis showed 99 to 100% similarity with sequences of the F. incarnatum-equiseti species complex (FIESC) (FD_01651 and FD_01628). In addition, a phylogenetic analysis based on the concatenated nucleotide sequences placed the isolates in the F. incarnatum clade at 100% bootstrap support. Thus, both morphological observations and molecular criteria supported identification of the isolates as F. incarnatum (Desm.) Sacc (synonym: Fusarium semitectum) (Leslie and Summerell 2006, Nirenberg 1990). Pathogenicity tests were performed on susceptible rice cultivar ‘Xiushui134’. At pollen cell maturity stage, a 2-ml conidial suspension (5 × 105 macroconidia/ml) of each isolate was injected into 10 rice panicles. Control plants were inoculated with sterile distilled water. Then, the pots were kept in a growth chamber at 28°C, 80% relative humidity, and 12 h/12 h light (10,000 lux)/dark. The experiment was repeated two times for each isolate. Two weeks post-inoculation, all inoculated panicles showed similar symptoms with the original samples, whereas no symptoms were observed on the control. The pathogen was re-isolated from inoculated panicles and identified by the method described above to fulfill Koch's postulates. Previous studies reported that F. incarnatum reproduced perithecia to overwinter on rice stubble as the inoculum of Fusarium head blight of wheat in southern China (Yang et al. 2018). To our knowledge, this is the first report of spikelet rot on rice caused by F. incarnatum in China. Further investigation is needed to gain a better understanding its potential geographic distribution of this new pathogen on rice crop. References: (1) Huang, S. W., et al. 2011. Crop Prot. 30: 10. (2) White, T. J., et al. 1990. Page 315 in: PCR Protocols: A Guide to Methods and Applications. Academic Press, San Diego, CA. (3) O’Donnell, K., et al. 1998. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 95: 2044. (4) O'Donnell, K., Cigelnik, E. 1997. Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 7: 103. (5) Geiser, D. M., et al. 2004. Eur. J. Plant Pathol. 110: 473. (6) Leslie, J. F., and Summerell, B. A. 2006. The Fusarium Laboratory Manual. Blackwell, Ames, IA. (7) Nirenberg, H. I. 1990. Stud. Mycol. 32: 91. (8) Yang, M. X., et al. 2018. Toxins. 10: 115. The author(s) declare no conflict of interest. Funding: Funding was provided by National Natural Science Foundation of China (grant no. 31800133), Zhejiang Provincial Natural Science Foundation of China (grant no. LQ18C140005), Key Research and Development Program of Zhejiang Province (grant no. 2019C02018), Shanghai Science and Technology for Agriculture Promotion Project (2019-02-08-00-08-F01127), and the Agricultural Science and Technology Innovation Program of China Academy of Agricultural Science (CAAS-ASTIP-2013- CNRRI).


Plant Disease ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tingting Zhu ◽  
Linxuan Li ◽  
Antonios Petridis ◽  
George Xydis ◽  
Maozhi Ren

Ligusticum chuanxiong (known as Chuanxiong in China) is a traditional edible-medicinal herb, which has been playing important roles in fighting against COVID-19 (Ma et al. 2020). In March 2021, we investigated stem rot of Chuanxiong in six adjacent fields (~100 ha) in Chengdu, Sichuan Province, China. The disease incidence was above 5% in each field. Symptomatic plants showed stem rot, watersoaked lesions, and blackening with white hyphae present on the stems. Twelve symptomatic Chuanxiong plants (2 plants/field) were sampled. Diseased tissues from the margins of necrotic lesions were surface sterilized in 75% ethanol for 45 s, and 2% NaClO for 5 min. Samples were then rinsed three times in sterile distilled water and cultured on potato dextrose agar (PDA) at 25ºC for 72 h. Fourteen fungal cultures were isolated from 18 diseased tissues, of which eight monosporic isolates showed uniform characteristics. The eight fungal isolates showed fluffy white aerial mycelia and produced yellow pigments with age. Mung bean broth was used to induce sporulation. Macroconidia were sickle-shaped, slender, 3- to 5-septate, and averaged 50 to 70 μm in length. Based on morphological features of colonies and conidia, the isolates were tentatively identified as Fusarium spp. (Leslie and Summerell 2006). To identify the species, the partial translation elongation factor 1 alpha (TEF1-α) gene was amplified and sequenced (O’Donnell et al. 1998). TEF1-α sequences of LCSR01, LCSR02 and LCSR05 isolates (GenBank nos. MZ169386, MZ169388 and MZ169387) were 100%, 99.72% and 99.86% identical to that of F. asiaticum strain NRRL 26156, respectively. The phylogenetic tree based on TEF1-α sequences showed these isolates clustered with F. asiaticum using Neighbor-Joining algorithm. Furthermore, these isolates were identified using the specific primer pair Fg16 F/R (Nicholson et al. 1998). The results showed these isolates (GenBank nos. MZ164938, MZ164939 and MZ164940) were 100% identical to F. asiaticum NRRL 26156. Pathogenicity test of the isolate LCSR01 was conducted on Chuanxiong. After wounding Chuanxiong stalks and rhizomes with a sterile needle, the wounds were inoculated with mycelia PDA plugs. A total of 30 Chuanxiong rhizomes and stalks were inoculated with mycelia PDA plugs, and five mock-inoculated Chuanxiong rhizomes and stalks served as controls. After inoculation, the stalks and rhizomes were kept in a moist chamber at 25°C in the dark. At 8 days post inoculation (dpi), all inoculated stalks and rhizomes exhibited water-soaked and blackened lesions. At 10 dpi, the stalks turned soft and decayed, and abundant hyphae grew on the exterior of infected plants, similar to those observed in the field. No disease symptoms were observed on the control plants. The pathogen was re-isolated from the inoculated tissues and the identity was confirmed as described above. Ten fungal cultures were re-isolated from the 10 inoculated tissues, of which nine fungal cultures were F. asiaticum, fulfilling Koch’s postulates. To our knowledge, this is the first report of F. asiaticum causing stem rot of Chuanxiong in China. Chuanxiong has been cultivated in rotation with rice over multiple years. This rotation may have played a role in the increase in inoculum density in soil and stem rot epidemics in Chuanxiong. Diseased Chuanxiong may be contaminated with the mycotoxins produced by F. asciaticum, 3-acetyldeoxynivalenol or nivalenol, which may deleteriously affect human health. Therefore, crop rotations should be considered carefully to reduce disease impacts.


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