scholarly journals First report of Fusarium lateritium causing shoots dieback of Acer negundo in Europe

Plant Disease ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Katarzyna Patejuk ◽  
Anna Baturo-Ciesniewska ◽  
Kamil Najberek ◽  
Wojciech Pusz

Box elder (Acer negundo) is a tree native to North America. In Europe it is considered a dangerous invasive species, and assigned to the highest (4th) category of environmental hazard (Tokarska-Guzik et al. 2012). The tree can threaten a wide range of ecosystems and compete with the native flora. The shoot dieback was observed on 20% of boxelder in July 2018 and 2019 in Bryzgiel (N53°59.963' E23°04.324') in NE Poland (Europe). Young trees (10-15 yr. old) with visible symptoms were observed in a small group on the rural roadside. Infected shoots were chlorotic. There were visible shallow cracks on the bark and brown discoloration in sapwood inside infected branches. Symptomatic shoots were collected in sterile envelopes, surface disinfected with 95% ethanol. Twelve fragments of wood were cut from the border of living and dead tissue, and then divided into 3-5 mm pieces, placed on PDA medium and incubated at 21°C. After 10 days ten Fusarium spp. strains were obtained. Pure cultures were derived by monosporic isolation. The identification of the isolates was initially based on morphology and molecular genotyping (Leslie & Summerell 2006). On PDA, strains produced white, dense, floccose aerial mycelium with a pink surface. The underside of the petri dish was brown. Growth of the colony was relatively slow and reached Ø 3.5 cm after two weeks. Microscopic observation revealed the presence of macroconidia located in a few orange sporodochia. Macroconidia were slightly curved, with dimensions of 38-45 µm × 3.2-3,5 µm, 4-5 septate, with well-formed foot cell and beak on the apex. On aerial hyphae, single intercalary chlamydospores were present. Microconidia were not found. Morphological identification was confirmed by sequencing the ITS regions, the TEF-1α and β-tubulin genes for representative isolates. Mycelia were grown on PDB and freeze dried prior to genomic DNA extraction using the CTAB method. Sequences of two isolates were deposited in GenBank as MN186748 and MN588156 for ITS; MZ191070 and MZ191072 for TEF-1α; and MZ191069 and MZ191071 for TEF-1α. BLASTn search in the NCBI database revealed 100, 98 and >99% similarities of ITS, TEF-1α and β-tubulin with F. lateritium isolates LC171689, KT350607 and FN554618 respectively. A pathogenicity test was conducted on five first year Ø 0.6-0.8cm shoots from a 10-year-old tree. Before inoculation their surface was disinfected with 95% ethanol. Then, bark of the twigs was split longitudinally with a sterile blade and pieces of 10-day-old aerial mycelium grown on PDA were applied on the wound sites. Control samples were inoculated with sterile distilled water only. Inoculated areas were covered with parafilm. First sign of infection was observed after three weeks, as a dark lesion in the place of inoculation and chlorosis. Three weeks later the brown ring on the sapwood was marked in the shoot cross-section. Morphologically identical to the original, F. lateritium isolate was reisolated from the infected tissues, thus fulfilling Koch’s postulates. F. lateritium is a species closely associated with trees and shrubs (Leslie & Summerell 2006). However, it has not been recorded on boxelder and this is the first report of F. lateritium causing dieback of boxelder maple. According to the Enemy Release Hypothesis (Elton 1958), new pathogens appearing on alien species can be an indicator of developing environmental resistance to the outlander, which indicate the grade of their domestication. This kind of notification poses a crucial role in invasion monitoring and the search for new biocontrol methods of invasive plant species.

Plant Disease ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 98 (9) ◽  
pp. 1272-1272
Author(s):  
S. Živković ◽  
V. Gavrilović ◽  
T. Popović ◽  
N. Dolovac ◽  
N. Trkulja

Quince (Cydonia oblonga Mill.) tree is traditionally grown in Serbia. The fruits are used for compote, marmalade, and brandy production. In December 2012, quince fruits cv. Leskovacka with symptoms of postharvest anthracnose were collected in a storage facility in the area of Sabac, western Serbia. The symptoms were observed on fruits approximately 2 months after harvest. The incidence of the disease was about 3%, but the symptoms were severe. Affected fruits showed sunken, dark brown to black lesions with orange conidial masses produced in black acervuli. Small pieces (3 to 5 mm) of necrotic tissue were surface sterilized for 1 min in 1% NaOCl, washed twice with sterile distilled water, and placed on potato dextrose agar (PDA). Macroscopic and microscopic morphology characteristics of three isolates were observed after growth on PDA for 7 days at 25°C under a 12-h photoperiod. Fungal colonies developed white to gray dense aerial mycelium with orange conidial masses in the center of the colony. Conidia were hyaline, aseptate, clavate with rounded distal apices, 15.2 (12.8 to 16.8) × 4.5 (4.0 to 5.2) μm (mean L/W ratio = 3.3, n = 100). Morphological characteristics are consistent with the description of Colletotrichum clavatum (2). Fungal isolates were also characterized by sequencing of the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) rDNA region using ITS1/IT4 primers and β-tubuline 2 gene using T1/T2 primers. The nucleotide sequences were deposited in GenBank (ITS Accession Nos. KF908866, KF908867, and KF908868; β-tubuline 2 gene KF908869, KF908870, and KF908871). BLAST analyses of ITS and β-tubuline 2 gene sequences showed that isolates from quince were 100% identical to other C. clavatum in GenBank (ITS JN121126, JN121130, JN121132, and JN121180; β-tubuline 2 gene JN121213 to 17, JN121219, JN121228, JN121261 to 62, and JN121266 to 69), thus confirming the morphological identification. To fulfill Koch's postulates, asymptomatic fruits of quince cv. Leskovacka (five fruits per isolate) were surface sterilized with 70% ethanol, wounded with a sterile needle, and inoculated with 50 μl of a spore suspension (1 × 106 conidia/ml). Five control fruits were inoculated with 50 μl of sterile distilled water. The experiment was repeated twice. After 10 days of incubation in plastic containers, under high humidity (>90% RH) at 25°C, typical anthracnose symptoms developed on inoculated fruits, while control fruits remained symptomless. The isolates recovered from symptomatic fruits showed the same morphological features as original isolates. C. clavatum previously indicated as group B (3), or genetic group A4 within the C. acutatum sensu lato complex (4), is responsible for olive anthracnose in some Mediterranean countries (1,2), and has been reported as causal agent of anthracnose on a wide range of other hosts including woody and herbaceous plants, ornamentals, and fruit trees worldwide (4). To our knowledge, this is the first report of C. clavatum in Serbia, and the first report of quince anthracnose caused by this pathogen in Europe. Anthracnose caused by C. clavatum can endanger the production and storage of quince in the future, and may require investigation of new disease management practices to control this fungus. References: (1) S. O. Cacciola et al. J. Plant Pathol. 94:29, 2012. (2) R. Faedda et al. Phytopathol. Mediterr. 50:283, 2011. (3) R. Lardner et al. Mycol. Res. 103:275, 1999. (4) S. Sreenivasaprasad and P. Talhinhas. Mol. Plant Pathol. 6:361, 2005.


Plant Disease ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jian Rong Tang ◽  
Yue Lian Liu ◽  
Xue Gui Yin ◽  
Jian Nong Lu ◽  
Yu Han Zhou

Castor bean (Ricinus communis L.) is an oil crop of significant economic importance in the industry and medicine. In August 2019, a branch dieback disease was observed on castor bean in a field in Zhanjiang (21.17°N, 110.18°E), China. The incidence rate was 35% (n=600 investigated plants). Symptoms were discoloration of leaves, branch dieback, and discoloration of internal stem tissues. The disease had spread to the whole branches and causing the plant to die. Seven diseased branches were collected from seven plants. Margins between healthy and diseased tissues were cut into 2 mm × 2 mm pieces. The surfaces were disinfested with 75% ethanol for 30 s and 2% sodium hypochlorite for 60 s. Then, the samples were rinsed thrice in sterile water, placed on PDA, and incubated at 28 °C. Pure cultures were obtained by transferring the hyphal tips to new PDA plates. Eighteen isolates were obtained (the isolate rate of 75%), which were the same fungus on the basis of morphological characteristics and molecular analysis of the internal transcribed spacer (ITS). A single representative isolate (RiB-1) was used for further study. The colony of RiB-1 was 5 cm in diameter on the 5th day on the PDA culture. The colony was greenish gray with an irregularly distributed and fluffy aerial mycelium, which turned black after 10 days. The mature conidia were 21.3–26.5 µm × 12.2–15.7 µm in size (n=100) and had two ovoid, dark brown cells with longitudinal striations. The morphological characteristics of the colonies were consistent with the description of Lasiodiplodia sp. (Alves et al. 2008). Three regions of the ITS, translation elongation factor (EF1-α), and β-tubulin genes were amplified and sequenced with the primer pairs ITS1/ITS4 (White et al. 1990), EF1-728F/EF1-986R (Alves et al. 2008), and Bt2a/Bt2b (Glass and Donaldson 1995), respectively. The resulting sequences were deposited in the GenBank under accession numbers MN759432 (ITS), MN719125 (EF1-α), and MN719128 (β-tubulin). BLASTn analysis demonstrated that these sequences were 100% identical to the corresponding ITS (MK530052), EF1-α (MK423878), and β-tubulin (MN172230) sequences of L. theobromae. Based on the morphological and molecular data, RiB-1 was determined as L. theobromae. A pathogenicity test was performed in a greenhouse with 80% relative humidity at 25 °C to 30 °C. Ten healthy plants of Zi Bi No. 5 castor bean (1-month-old) were grown in pots with one plant in each pot. Five pots were wound-inoculated with 5-mm-diameter mycelial plugs obtained from 7-day cultures. Five additional pots treated with PDA plugs served as the controls. Inoculated stems were moisturized with sterile cotton for five days. The test was conducted three times. Disease symptoms, similar to those in the field, were observed on the inoculated plants two weeks after inoculation, and L. theobromae was 100% reisolated from the inoculated plants. The control plants remained symptomless, and reisolations were unsuccessful. These results consistent with Koch’s postulates. L. theobromae (Lima et al. 1997) and L. hormozganensis (Fábio et al. 2018) had been reported to cause stem rot on castor bean in Brazil, but whether L. theobromae caused the branch dieback on castor bean in China has not been reported yet. Thus, this study is the first report of L. theobromae causing the branch dieback on castor bean in Zhanjiang, China. This study provides an important reference for the control of the disease.


Plant Disease ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 98 (3) ◽  
pp. 420-420 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Chebil ◽  
R. Fersi ◽  
A. Yakoub ◽  
S. Chenenaoui ◽  
M. Chattaoui ◽  
...  

In 2011, common symptoms of grapevine dieback were frequently observed in 2- to 5-year-old table grape (Vitis vinifera L.) cvs. in four vineyards located in northern Tunisia. The symptoms included dead spur and cordons, shoot dieback, and sunken necrotic bark lesions, which progressed into the trunk resulting in the death of large sections of the vine. Longitudinal and transversal sections of cordons and spurs from symptomatic vines revealed brown wedge-shaped cankers of hard consistency. Twelve symptomatic samples from spur and cordons were collected, surface disinfected by dipping into 5% (v/v) sodium hypochlorite for 2 min, and small pieces from the edge of necrotic and healthy tissue were removed and plated onto potato dextrose agar (PDA) at 25°C in the dark. Based on colony and conidia morphological characteristics, isolates were divided in three species, named Diplodia seriata, Botryosphaeria dothidea, and Neofusicoccum luteum. D. seriata colonies were gray-brown with dense aerial mycelium producing brown cylindric to ellipsoid conidia rounded at both ends and averaged 22.4 × 11.7 μm (n = 50). B. dothidea colonies were initially white with abundant aerial mycelium, gradually becoming dark green olivaceous. Conidia were fusiform to fusiform elliptical with a subobtuse apex and averaged 24.8 × 4.7 μm (n = 50). N. luteum colonies were initially pale to colorless, gradually darkening with age and becoming gray to dark gray producing a yellow pigment that diffuses into the agar. Conidia were hyaline, thin-walled, aseptate, fusiform to fusiform elliptical, and averaged 19.8 × 5.5 μm (n = 50). Identity of the different taxa was confirmed by sequence analyses of the internal transcribed spacer (ITS1-5.8S-ITS2) region of the rDNA and part of the elongation factor 1-alpha (EF1-α) gene. BLAST analysis of sequences indicated that six isolates were identified as D. seriata (GenBank: AY259094, AY343353), one isolate as B. dothidea (AY236949, AY786319) and one isolate as N. luteum (AY259091, AY573217). Sequences were deposited in GenBank under accessions from KC178817 to KC178824 and from KF546829 to KF546836 for ITS region and EF1-α gene, respectively. A pathogenicity test was conducted on detached green shoots cv. Italia for the eight Botryosphaeriaceae isolates. Shoots were inoculated by placing a colonized agar plug (5 mm diameter) from the margin of a 7-day-old colony on fresh wound sites made with a sterilized scalpel. Each wound was covered with moisturized cotton and sealed with Parafilm. Control shoots were inoculated using non-colonized PDA plugs. After 6 weeks, discoloration of xylem and phloem and necrosis with average length of 38.8, 17.6, and 11.2 mm were observed from inoculated shoots with D. seriata, N. luteum, and B. dothidea, respectively, and all three fungi were re-isolated from necrotic tissue, satisfying Koch's postulates. Control shoots showed no symptoms of the disease and no fungus was re-isolated. In Tunisia, Botryosphaeria-related dieback was reported only on citrus tree caused by B. ribis (2), on Pinus spp. caused by D. pinea (4), on Quercus spp. caused by D. corticola (3), and on olive tree (Olea europea) caused by D. seriata (1). To our knowledge, this is the first report of D. seriata, B. dothidea, and N. luteum associated with grapevine dieback in Tunisia. References: (1) M. Chattaoui et al. Plant Dis. 96:905, 2012. (2) H. S. Fawcett. Calif. Citrogr. 16:208, 1931. (3) B. T. Linaldeddu et al. J. Plant Pathol. 91:234. 2009. (4) B. T. Linaldeddu et al. Phytopathol. Mediterr. 47:258, 2008.


Plant Disease ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 98 (2) ◽  
pp. 279-279 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. M. Serrato-Diaz ◽  
L. I. Rivera-Vargas ◽  
R. Goenaga ◽  
R. D. French-Monar

Dimocarpus longan L., commonly known as longan, is a tropical fruit tree of the Sapindaceae family. From 2008 to 2010, a disease survey for longan was conducted in March and October in Puerto Rico. Fruit rot and inflorescence blight (rotting of the rachis, rachilla, and flowers) were observed in fields of longan at the USDA-ARS Research Farm in Isabela, and two commercial orchards in Puerto Rico. Tissue sections (1 mm2) of diseased inflorescences and surface of the fruit were disinfested with 70% ethanol, rinsed with sterile water, and transferred to acidified potato dextrose agar (APDA). Three isolates of Lasiodiplodia theobromae (Pat.) Griffon & Maubl. (Lt) were isolated from symptomatic tissue and identified morpho-molecularly using a taxonomic key for the Botryosphaeriaceae and DNA sequence analysis (1). In APDA, colonies of Lt had initial greenish-gray aerial mycelia that turned dark brown with age. Pycnidia were dark brown to black. Immature conidia were sub-ovoid to ellipsoid, apex rounded, truncate at the base, thick-walled, hyaline, and one-celled, becoming dark brown, two-celled, and with irregular longitudinal striations when mature. Conidia (n = 50) for all the isolates averaged 26.9 μm long by 13 μm wide. For molecular identification, the ITS1-5.8S-ITS2 region and fragments of the β-tubulin and elongation factor 1-alpha (EF1-α) genes were sequenced and BLASTn searches done in GenBank. Accession numbers of gene sequences of Lt submitted to GenBank were KC964546, KC964547, and KC964548 for ITS region; KC964549, KC964550, and KC964551 for β-tubulin; and KC964552, KC964553, and KC964554 for EF1-α. For all genes used, sequences were 99 to 100% identical to reference isolate CBS164.96 of Lt reported in GenBank (accessions AY640255, EU673110, and AY640258). Pathogenicity tests were conducted on six random healthy non-detached inflorescences of longan and six healthy detached fruits per isolate. Unwounded inflorescences and fruit were inoculated with 5-mm mycelial disks from 8-day-old pure cultures grown in APDA. Inflorescences were enclosed in plastic bags for 5 days under field conditions while fruits were kept in a humid chamber using plastic boxes for 5 days under laboratory conditions of 25°C and 12 h of fluorescent light. Untreated controls were inoculated with APDA disks only. The experiment was repeated once. Five days after inoculation, isolates of Lt caused inflorescence blight, fruit rot, and aril (flesh) rot. Inflorescences turned brown and flower mummification was observed on the inflorescences. The exocarp (peel) and endocarp (aril) turned dark brown and mycelial growth and pycnidia of Lt were observed on fruits. Untreated controls did not show any symptoms and no fungi were re-isolated from tissue. In diseased inflorescences and fruits, Lt was re-isolated from diseased tissue and identified using morphological and molecular parameters, thus fulfilling Koch's postulates. Lt has been reported to cause dieback, stem end rot, and fruit rot on a wide range of plants host (2,4). In longan, Lt has been reported causing fruit rot in Thailand (3). To our knowledge, this is the first time that Lt has been reported causing inflorescence blight in longan and the first report of Lt causing fruit rot in Puerto Rico. References: (1) A. J. L. Phillips. Key to the various lineages in “Botryosphaeria” Version 01 2007. Retrieved from http://www.crem.fct.unl.pt/botryosphaeria_site/key.htm , 26 November 2013. (2) B. Slippers et al. Mycologia 97:99, 2005. (3) P. Suwanakood et al. Asian J. Biol. Ed. 3:47, 2007. (4) A. F. Wright and P. F. Harmon. Plant Dis. 93:962, 2009.


Plant Disease ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 97 (8) ◽  
pp. 1119-1119 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Garibaldi ◽  
D. Bertetti ◽  
P. Pensa ◽  
A. Poli ◽  
M. L. Gullino

Origanum vulgare L., common name oregano, family Labiatae, is grown for its aromatic and medicinal properties and as ornamental. In the fall of 2012, a blight was observed in a farm located near Albenga (northern Italy) on 6% of 30,000 50-day-old plants, grown in trays in a peat/perlite mix. Semicircular, water soaked lesions appeared on leaves and stems, starting from the basal ones. As the disease progressed, blighted leaves turned brown, withered, clung to the shoots, and matted on the surrounding foliage. Eventually, infected plants died. Leaf and stem fragments taken from the margin of the diseased tissues belonging to 10 plants were disinfected for 10 s in 1% NaOCl, rinsed with sterile water, and plated on potato dextrose agar (PDA). A fungus with the morphological characters of Rhizoctonia solani was consistently recovered. Three isolates of R. solani obtained from affected plants were successfully anastomosed with R. solani isolate AG 1 (ATCC 58946). Three pairings were made for each tester strain. The hyphal diameter at the point of anastomosis was reduced, the anastomosis point was obvious, and death of adjacent cells was observed. Results were consistent with other reports on anastomosis reactions (2). Isolates from oregano were paired with R. solani isolates AG 2, 3, 4, 6, 7, or 11 and examined microscopically. Anastomosis was not observed in any of the pairings. Tests were conducted twice. Mycelium of 10-day-old isolates from oregano appeared reddish brown, coarse, and radiate. Numerous dark brown sclerotia, 0.3 to 1.0 mm diameter (average 0.7) developed within 10 days after transfer of mycelia to PDA in 90 mm diameter petri dishes at 21 to 24°C. The descriptions of mycelium and sclerotia were typical for subgroup IB Type 1 (4). The internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region of rDNA was amplified using the primers ITS1/ITS4 and sequenced. BLASTn analysis (1) of the 538 bp showed a 99% homology with the sequence of R. solani FJ746937, confirming the morphological identification of the species. The nucleotide sequence has been assigned the GenBank Accession KC493638. For pathogenicity tests, one of the isolates assigned to the anastomosis group AG-1-IB was tested by placing 9 mm diameter mycelial disks removed from PDA 10-day-old cultures of the fungus on leaves of 90-day-old oregano plants (n = 35). Thirty-five plants inoculated with non-inoculated PDA disks served as controls. Plants were covered with plastic bags and maintained in a growth chamber at 25 ± 1°C with 12 h light/dark. The first symptoms, similar to those observed in the farm, developed 3 days after inoculation. Nine days after the artificial inoculation, 50% of plants were dead. About 10 colonies of R. solani were reisolated from infected leaves of inoculated plants. Control plants remained healthy. The pathogenicity test was carried out twice with similar results. Symptoms caused by R. solani have been recently observed on O. vulgare in Greece (3). This is, to our knowledge, the first report of blight of O. vulgare caused by R. solani in Italy. References: (1) S. F. Altschul et al. Nucleic Acids Res., 25:3389, 1997. (2) D. E. Carling. Grouping in Rhizoctonia solani by hyphal anastomosis reactions. In: Rhizoctonia Species: Taxonomy, Molecular Biology, Ecology, Pathology and Disease control. Kluwer Academic Publishers, The Netherlands, pp. 37-47, 1996. (3) C. D. Holevas et al. Benaki Phytopathol. Inst., Kiphissia, Athens, 19:1-96, 2000. (4) R. T. Sherwood. Phytopathology 59:1924, 1969.


Plant Disease ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dayu Lan ◽  
Fangling Shu ◽  
Yanhui Lu ◽  
Anfa Shou ◽  
Wei Lin ◽  
...  

Tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L.), one of the chief commercial crops, is wildly cultivated worldwide. In June 2020 and 2021, an unknown bacterial leaf spot on tobacco was found in Hezhou and Hechi City, Guangxi, China. 30% of the tobacco were affected and the rate of diseased leaves reached about 10% in the field under high temperature and rainstorm. The disease mainly damaged the middle and top leaves of tobacco plants at vigorous growing stage. The initial symptoms were water-soaked spots on the frontal half of a leaf, and then expanded into circular to irregular spots with a yellow halo at the edge. The spots mostly appeared dark brown at high air humidity, while yellow brown at low humidity and exhibited a concentric pattern. In severe cases, the lesions coalesced and the whole leaf was densely covered with lesions, resulting in the loss of baking value. A bacterium was consistently isolated from diseased leaf tissues on nutrient agar (NA). Growth on NA was predominantly grayish white circular bacterial colonies with smooth margins, and the bacterium is rod-shaped, gram-negative and fluorescent on King’s B medium. Seven isolates (ND04A-ND04C and ZSXF02-ZSXF05) were selected for molecular identification and pathogenicity tests. Genomic DNA of the bacterium was extracted and the housekeeping gene of cts (encoding citrate synthase) was amplified with the primers cts-Fs/cts-Rs (forward primer cts-Fs: 5’-CCCGTCGAGCTGCCAATWCTGA-3’; reverse primer cts-Rs: 5’-ATCTCGCACGGSGTRTTGAACATC-3’) (Berge et al. 2014; Sarkar et al. 2004). 409-bp cts gene sequences were deposited in the GenBank database for seven isolates (accession no. OK105110-OK105116). Sequence of seven isolates shared 100% identity with several Pseudomonas cichorii strains within the GenBank database (accession no. KY940268 and KY940271), and the phylogenetic tree of cts genes of the seven isolates clustered with the phylogroup 11 of Pseudomonas syringae (accession no. KJ877799 and KJ878111), which was classified as P.cichorii. To satisfy Koch’s postulates, a pathogenicity test was tested by using a needle to dip a suspension of the bacterium (108 CFU/ml) and pricking three holes in the tobacco leaf. The control plants leaves were needled with sterile water. Each tobacco plant was inoculated with three leaves, and the test was repeated three times. All plants were placed in transparent plastic boxes and incubated in a greenhouse at 25 ± 3°C. The water-soaked spots appeared 24h after inoculation and quickly expanded through leaf veins. Three days after inoculation, all the inoculated leaves showed symptoms similar to those observed in the field. Control plants remained healthy. Only P. cichorii was successfully re-isolated from the lesions, confirming Koch’s postulates. Pseudomonas cichorii can infect eggplant, lettuce, tomatoand other crops, and has a wide range of hosts (Timilsina et al. 2017; Ullah et al. 2015). To our knowledge, this is the first report of P. cichorii causing leaf spot on tobacco in China.


Plant Disease ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 93 (6) ◽  
pp. 669-669 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. Y. Olivier ◽  
D. T. Lowery ◽  
L. W. Stobbs ◽  
C. Vincent ◽  
B. Galka ◽  
...  

In North America, elm yellows, aster yellows (AY), and X-disease phytoplasmas have been detected in American grapevines (1), and recently, Bois noir was detected in Canadian vineyards from British Columbia (BC) and Ontario (ON) (2). Typical symptoms of grapevine yellows (GY) include leaf rolling and chlorosis, uneven or total lack of lignification of canes, flower abortion or berry withering, and stunting. In 2006 and 2007, independent surveys were conducted by the Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) and Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada (AAFC) to detect phytoplasmas in Canadian vineyards containing different cultivars in BC, ON, Québec (QC), Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, and Prince Edward Island. The CFIA collected and tested 651 fresh leaf samples from recently imported grapevines and older grapevines in the same or neighboring blocks displaying symptoms typical of those associated with disease caused by phytoplasmas. Many vineyards were surveyed only once. AAFC collected and tested 3,485 samples from symptomatic and asymptomatic grapevines from established vineyards in ON, BC, and QC. The same vineyards were sampled in ON and BC both years; QC vineyards were only sampled in 2007. AAFC-collected leaf samples were freeze dried and stored at –20°C before processing. CFIA samples were tested by a modified real-time PCR assay and TaqMan probe targeting the 16S ribosomal RNA gene that detects a wide range of known phytoplasmas (2). Positive samples were confirmed by conventional PCR using the phytoplasma-specific primers P1/P7 (3) and the resulting ~1,800-bp fragment was cloned and sequenced as previously described (2). DNA extracted by AAFC was amplified by nested PCR technology with universal phytoplasma specific primer pairs P1/P6 and R16R2/R16F2 (3) and the resulting 1,200-bp fragment was cloned and sequenced. Two plants, one located in ON in 2006 and the other in BC in 2007, were found to be infected with an AY-like phytoplasma by the CFIA. The phytoplasmas detected in both infected plants had a 99.9% nt sequence identity with AY phytoplasma sequences from GenBank (Accession Nos. AF222063 and AY665676, respectively), with the BC isolate also showing 100% identity to a strain of AY, ash witches'-broom phytoplasma (GenBank Accession No. AY566302). AAFC detected phytoplasma DNA in both years in a total of 17 symptomatic plants and 21 asymptomatic plants from different vine varieties in ON, BC, and QC. Positive samples were found to have a 99.0% nt sequence identity to AY subgroup 16SrI-A (GenBank Accession No. AY180956). Sequences were exchanged for confirmation of phytoplasma identity and were deposited in Genbank under Accession Nos. FJ659844 and FJ824597. Phytoplasma strains were identified for all plants in which phytoplasmas were detected. Results show that AY is present in vineyards in the provinces of ON, BC, and QC. To our knowledge, this is the first report of AY being detected in grapevines in Canada. References: (1) E. Boudon-Padieu. Bull. O I V, 79:299, 2003. (2) M. Rott et al. Plant Dis. 91:1682, 2007. (3) E. Tanne et al. Phytopathology 91:741, 2001.


Plant Disease ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 96 (12) ◽  
pp. 1826-1826 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Lazarotto ◽  
M. F. B. Muniz ◽  
T. Poletto ◽  
C. B. Dutra ◽  
E. Blume ◽  
...  

Conspicuous leaf spots in combination with fruit spots were observed for the first time in April and May 2010 on a 30-ha pecan [Carya illinoensis (Wangenh.) K. Koch] orchard in the state of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil. Initially, tiny grey spots were observed on leaves and, over time, the spots expanded to become gray to light brown circles surrounded by a dark brown border, followed by leaves falling. Eventually, fruits were also attacked, with typical symptoms beginning with tiny water soaked spots which then became necrotic. The disease was also observed in pecan nursery and field seedlings. Isolation of the pathogen from symptomatic leaves and morphological identification by conidia characters (number of cells, color, hyaline terminal cells, number of appendages) revealed Pestalotiopsis sp. (2) as the causal agent of the disease. Conidia constituted of transverse septa with four dark intermediate sections and two hyaline terminal sections. One of the terminal sections presented two or three apical appendages. Conidia averaged 6.88 μm wide × 31.00 μm long, not considering the apical appendages. Primers ITS 1 and ITS 4 were used to amplify the internal transcribes spacer ITS 1-5.8S-ITS 2 region. Nucleotide sequences were 99% similar to Pestalotiopsis clavispora (G.F. Atk.) Steyaert. Conidia produced on potato dextrose agar medium were used to inoculate 8 plants with a spore suspension of 2.0 × 106 conidia/ml. Eight additional plants were used as control (non-inoculated). The inoculation was performed by spraying the suspension onto the leaves of Pecan seedlings and the plants were incubated for 72 h in a humid chamber (1). All inoculated plants showed symptoms 25 days after inoculation and the fungus was reisolated. The pathogenicity test was repeated once. Ten more isolates collected from four different cities in the same state were identified as Pestalotiopsis spp. by morphological characterization and pathogenicity was confirmed. Because this disease causes losses on production of nuts indirectly by reducing photosynthetically active area when the pathogen attacks leaves and directly when attacking fruits, it may restrict the production where the pathogen occurs. On some orchards in the state of Rio Grande do Sul, the attack rate reached 80% of the plants. P. clavispora has been reported causing stem end-rot of avocado in Chile (3), but this note constitutes the first report, to our knowledge, of P. clavispora causing leaf spot on C. illinoensis in Brazil. References: (1) A. C. Alfenas and F. A. Ferreira. Page 117 in: Métodos em Fitopatologia. A. C Alfenas and R. G. Mafia (eds.). Editora: UFV, Viçosa, 2007. (2) S. S. N. Maharachchikumbura et al. Fungal Diversity 50:167, 2011. (3) A. L. Valencia et al. Plant Dis. 95:492, 2011.


Plant Disease ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Laikun Xia ◽  
Yanyong Cao ◽  
Jie Wang ◽  
Jie Zhang ◽  
Shengbo Han ◽  
...  

Maize stalk rot has become one of the most important diseases in maize production in China. From 2017 to 2019, a survey was conducted to determine the population diversity of Fusarium species associated with maize diseases in 18 cities across Henan Province. Maize stalk rot with an incidence of more than 20% that caused yield losses up to 30% was observed on maize variety Zhengdan958, which was grown in two continuous maize fields in Zhumadian City, Henan Province. The stem tissues from the boundary between diseased and healthy pith were chopped into small pieces (3 × 8 mm), disinfected (70% ethanol for 1 min) and then placed onto potato dextrose agar (PDA) amended with L-(+)-Lactic-acid (1 g/L) and incubated at 25°C for 4 days. Colonies on PDA produced fluffy, light yellow aerial mycelium and purple to deep brick red pigment at 25°C (Fig 1A, 1B). On carnation leaf agar (CLA), macroconidia in orange sporodochia formed abundantly, but microconidia were absent. Macroconidia were short and thick-walled, had 3 to 5 septa, a poorly developed foot cell and rounded apical cell (Fig 1C). These characteristics matched the description of Fusarium culmorum (Leslie and Summerell 2006) and isolates DMA268-1-2 and HNZMD-12-7 were selected for further identity confirmation. Species identification was confirmed by partial sequences of three phylogenic loci (EF1-α, RPB1, and RPB2) using the primer pairs EF1/EF2, CULR1F/CULR1R, and CULR2F/CULR2R, respectively (O'Donnell et al., 1998). The consensus sequences from the two isolates were deposited in GenBank (MZ265416 and MZ265417 for TEF, respectively; MZ265412 and MZ265414 for RPB1, respectively; MZ265413 and MZ265415 for RPB2). BLASTn searches indicated that the nucleotide sequences of the three loci of the two isolates revealed 99% to 100% similarity to those of F. culmorum strains deposited in the GenBank, Fusarium-ID, and MLST databases (Supplementary Table 1~3). Pathogenicity test was conducted at the flowering-stage using Zhengdan958 and Xundan20 plants according to previously described method (Zhang et al., 2016; Cao et al., 2021; Zhang et al., 2021). The second or third internodes of thirty flowering plants were drilled to make a wound approximately 8 mm in diameter using an electric drill. Approximately 0.5 mL inoculum (125 mL colonized PDA homogenized with 75 mL sterilized distilled water) was injected into the wound and sealed with Vaseline and Parafilm to maintain moisture and avoid contamination. Sterile PDA slurry was used as a control. Thirty days after inoculation, the dark-brown, soft rot of pith tissues above and below the injection sites were observed, and some plants were severely rotten and lodged (Fig 1D, 1E). These symptoms were similar to those observed in the field. No symptoms were observed on control plants. The same pathogen was re-isolated from the inoculated stalk lesions but not from the control, thereby fulfilling Koch's postulates. To our knowledge, this is the first report of F. culmorum as the causal agent of stalk rot on maize plants in China. Also, this fungus has been reported to cause maize ear rot in China (Duan et al. 2016) and produce mycotoxins such as trichothecenes, nivalenol, and zearalenone that cause toxicosis in animals (Leslie and Summerell 2006). The occurrence of maize stalk rot and ear rot caused by F. culmorum should be monitored due to the potential risk for crop loss and mycotoxin contamination.


Plant Disease ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 92 (5) ◽  
pp. 832-832 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Aroca ◽  
R. Raposo ◽  
D. Gramaje ◽  
J. Armengol ◽  
S. Martos ◽  
...  

A field of Richter 110 rootstock mother plants in Valencia Province (eastern Spain) was surveyed during November 2006 to study the mycoflora of declining plants. Two canes with stunted leaves were collected from a plant with a reduced number of shoots. No cankers or vascular lesions were observed in the collected canes. Six wood chips (1 to 2 mm thick) were taken from one basal fragment (3 to 4 cm long) of each cane, surface sterilized in 70% ethanol for 1 min, and plated on malt extract agar supplemented with 0.5 g L–1 of streptomycin sulfate. Petri dishes were incubated for 7 days at 25°C. A fungus was consistently isolated from all samples that showed the following characteristics: colonies grown on potato dextrose agar (PDA) at 25°C developed a white, aerial mycelium that turned gray after 4 to 6 days and produced pycnidia after 1 month on sterile grapevine slivers of twigs placed on the PDA surface; conidia from culture were ellipsoidal, thick walled, initially hyaline, nonseptate, and measuring 20 to 25 (22.5) × 12 to 14 (13) μm; aged conidia were brown, 1-septate with longitudinal striations in the wall; and pseudoparaphyses variable in form and length were interspersed within the fertile tissue. The fungus was identified as Lasiodiplodia theobromae (Pat.) Griffon & Maubl. from the above characteristics (2). Identity was confirmed by analysis of the nucleotide sequences of the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region from the rRNA repeat and part of the translation elongation factor 1-alpha (EF1-α) and the β-tubulin (B-tub) genes, as done elsewhere (1,3). BLAST searches at GenBank showed a high identity with reference sequences (ITS: 100%, EF1-α: 97%; B-tub: 99%). Representative sequences of the studied DNA regions were deposited at GenBank (Accession Nos.: ITS: EU254718; EF1-α: EU254719; and B-tub: EU254720). A pathogenicity test was conducted on 1-year-old grapevine plants cv. Macabeo grafted onto Richter 110 rootstocks maintained in a greenhouse. A superficial wound was made on the bark of 10 plants with a sterilized scalpel, ≈10 cm above the graft union. A mycelial plug obtained from the margin of an actively growing fungal colony (isolate JL664) was placed in the wound and the wound was wrapped with Parafilm. Ten additional control plants were inoculated with sterile PDA plugs. All control plants grew normally, and the inoculation wound healed 3 months after inoculation. Plants inoculated with L. theobromae showed no foliar symptoms in the same period, but developed cankers variable in size surrounding the inoculation sites. Vascular necroses measuring 8.4 ± 1.5 cm (mean ± standard error) developed in the inoculated plants that were significantly longer than the controls (0.3 ± 0.2 cm). The pathogen was reisolated from all inoculated plants and no fungus was reisolated from the controls. These results confirmed the pathogenicity of L. theobromae to grapevine and points to a possible involvement of L. theobromae in the aetiology of grapevine decline as previously reported (3,4). To our knowledge, this is the first report of L. theobromae isolated from grapevine in Spain. References: (1) J. Luque et al. Mycologia 97:1111, 2005. (2) E. Punithalingam. No. 519 in: Descriptions of Pathogenic Fungi and Bacteria. CMI, Kew, Surrey, UK, 1976. (3) J. R. Úrbez-Torres et al. Plant Dis. 90:1490, 2006. (4) J. M. van Niekerk et al. Phytopathol. Mediterr. 45(suppl.):S43, 2006.


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