scholarly journals First Report of Cladobotryum protrusum Causing Cobweb Disease on Cultivated Morchella importuna

Plant Disease ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 104 (3) ◽  
pp. 977
Author(s):  
Y. F. Lan ◽  
Q. Q. Cong ◽  
Q. W. Wang ◽  
L. N. Tang ◽  
X. M. Li ◽  
...  
Plant Disease ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 96 (9) ◽  
pp. 1374-1374 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. K. Kim ◽  
Y. H. Lee ◽  
K. M. Cho ◽  
J. Y. Lee

Pleurotus eryngii is one of the most commercially important mushrooms in Korea. In May 2009, unusual symptoms were observed in P. eryngii grown in mushroom farms in Changnyeong and Hapcheon, in Gyeong-nam Province, Korea. One of the main symptoms was cobweb-like growth of fungal mycelia over the mushroom surface. Colonies on the surface rapidly overwhelmed the mushrooms, which turned pale brown or yellow. Mushrooms eventually turned dark brown and became rotten. Colonies of the isolates on potato dextrose agar (PDA) were yellowish, and a reddish or orange color was evident in the agar. The colonies grew 20 to 30 mm per day on PDA. Large spores with a single septum were produced on vertically branched conidiophores bearing two to four, mostly three to four, sporogenous cells, ranging from 17.2 to 20.5 μm long and 8.0 to 10.2 μm thick. The shape of the conidia was ellipsoid and obovoid. These morphological characteristics are consistent with descriptions of Cladobotryum mycophilum, a causal agent of cobweb disease in Agaricus bisporus (1,4). To identify the isolated fungal pathogen, the ITS region was amplified with ITS1 and ITS4 primers and sequenced. The sequence data from the isolate was deposited in GenBank (Accession No. JF693809). A BLAST search showed that the isolated strain belonged to a species of Cladobotryum. The highest similarity (99.5%) was to the ITS sequence of C. mycophilum (teleomorph Hypomyces odoratus) (GenBank Accession Nos. JF505112 and Y17096) (3,4). The strain that was tested for pathogenicity was grown on PDA at 25°C for 72 h. The inoculum was prepared by flooding the agar surface with 10 ml of sterilized double distilled water and scraping it with a spatula. The resulting spore suspension was filtered through three layers of cheesecloth. Conidial concentration was adjusted with a hemacytometer to 1 × 106 conidia ml–1. A conidia suspension was inoculated onto each of several stages of mushroom cultivation with a pipette. The control was spotted with double distilled water. In the case of infection during the inoculation and spawn running stages, the fungal mycelia colonized the media and hampered development of the mycelium of P. eryngii. In the regeneration and primordia formation stages of the host, the mycelium of the pathogen covered the surface of the plastic bottle containing the substrates and developed many spores. In the growing and harvesting stages, the surface of mushroom was overwhelmed by the mycelium of the fungal pathogen and turned pale or dark brown, accompanied by cracking of the stipe surface and finally rotting with a foul odor. These symptoms were similar to the observation from natural infection. The symptoms of the cobweb-like disease in A. bisporus (1,2) were observed within 5 to 7 days of inoculation with conidia suspensions of C. mycophilum. Fungi isolated from inoculated mushrooms were shown to be identical, based on phenotypic characteristic, to the inoculated strain used in these pathogenicity tests. No symptoms were observed on controls. To our knowledge, this is the first report on the occurrence of C. mycophilum on the edible mushroom P. eryngii in Korea. Based on the pathogenicity test results, the pathogen could attack P. eryngii in any cultivation stage, making it a potentially serious fungal pathogen in P. eryngii. References: (1) C. G. Back et al. J. Gen. Plant Pathol. 76:232, 2010. (2) R. H. Gaze. Mushroom J. 546:23, 1995. (3) F. J. Gea et al. Plant Dis. 95:1030, 2011. (4) H. M. Grogan and R. H. Gaze. Mycol. Res. 104:357, 2000.


2017 ◽  
Vol 84 (1) ◽  
pp. 65-69 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peixin He ◽  
Congcong Li ◽  
Yingli Cai ◽  
Ya Zhang ◽  
Yinbing Bian ◽  
...  

Plant Disease ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wentao Qin ◽  
Jun Li ◽  
Zhaoqing Zeng ◽  
Shouxian Wang ◽  
Lin Gao ◽  
...  

Oudemansiella raphanipes is an edible mushroom with medicinal properties,which has been recently cultivated throughout China (Hao et al. 2016). In October 2019, a disease with symptoms similar to that of cobweb disease (Carrasco et al. 2017) was observed in O. raphanipes in the Tongzhou District, Beijing, China, infecting 25% of the fruiting bodies (Fig. 1A, B). White cotton-like net of hyphae were present typically on the casing soil or on the stipe of the fruiting bodies; they gradually spread to the pileus, covering the fruiting body, which eventually wilted and died (Fig. 1C, D), resulting in yield reduction and economic loss. Cultures were obtained by aseptically transferring the diseased fruiting bodies onto potato dextrose agar (PDA) at 25 °C; they were deposited in the culture collection (ID: JZBQA1) of the Beijing Academy of Agricultural and Forestry Sciences, China. The colonies were pale white/white, with an occasional formation of yellow diffusing pigments on the reverse side (Fig. 1E–G). Conidiophores were Cladobotryum-like, phialides were solitary or commonly divergent in whorls of 2–3 (–4), lageniform to subulate, 20–63.5 (–66) × (3.8–) 4–5.3 (–9) μm (n = 40) (Fig. 1H, I); conidia were hyaline, oval to ellipsoidal, with one or two septa, (10.4–) 11.4–20 (–22) × 6.6–9.5 (–10) μm (n = 40) (Fig. 1J); chlamydospores were globose or ellipsoidal (Fig. 1K). The morphological characteristics were consistent with that of Cladobotryum varium (Back et al. 2012a, b; Sun et al. 2019). For species-level fungal identification, genomic DNA was extracted using the DNeasy Plant Mini Kit (Qiagen, USA). The internal transcribed spacer (ITS) regions, translation elongation factor 1 alpha exon (TEF1-α), RNA polymerase II subunit b (RPB2), and RNA polymerase I largest subunit (RPB1) genes were amplified using the primer pairs ITS1/ITS4 (White et al. 1990), EF1-983F/2218R (Rehner and Buckley 2005), RPB2-5F/7cR (Liu et al. 1999), and RPB1F1 (5'-GCCGATGAAGTTGGTCTA-3')/RPB1R1 (5'-TATGTTGCGGTGAGCCTT-3'), respectively. A BLAST nucleotide search showed 99.34% (449/452 bp), 99.24% (914/921 bp), 98.08% (1,022/1,042 bp), and 99.66% (588/590 bp) homology, respectively, with those of the ex-type culture of Hypomyces aurantius TFC 95-171 (FN859425.1, FN868743.1, FN868679.1, and FN868805.1). The four sequences were deposited in GenBank (accession numbers: MW534093, MW560066, MW560064, and MW560065). Phylogenetic trees based on the assessed gene loci revealed that the JZBQA1 strain was closely related to C. varium (Fig. 2). A in vivo pathogenicity test was performed using the fruiting bodies (Fig. 1L, O). Spore suspension (108 spores/mL) of the JZBQA1 strain or sterile distilled water was sprayed on six healthy fruiting bodies, maintained in an artificial climate chamber at 24-26°C. Cobweb-like features were observed on the fruiting bodies treated with the spore suspension 2-3 days post-inoculation; while those treated with water did not exhibit such features (Fig. 1L, O). The same pathogen was re-isolated and confirmed from the infected fruiting bodies by integrated analysis of morphological characteristics and gene sequencing data. Cladobotryum spp. infects different varieties of cultivated edible mushrooms, resulting in the development of cobweb diseases (Cao et al. 2020; Carrasco et al. 2017). Cladobotryum varium is the causal agent of cobweb disease in Flammulina velutipes and Hypsizygus marmoreus (Back et al. 2012a, b). To our knowledge, this is the first report of cobweb disease caused by C. varium in O. raphanipes. This finding is a valuable contribution to the knowledge of cobweb disease development in edible fungi.


Plant Disease ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 102 (7) ◽  
pp. 1452 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Z. Wang ◽  
C. J. Ma ◽  
S. S. Zhou ◽  
K. Põldmaa ◽  
H. Tamm ◽  
...  

Plant Disease ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 100 (11) ◽  
pp. 2334-2334 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y. F. Lan ◽  
Q. W. Wang ◽  
C. X. Yu ◽  
Q. Q. Cong ◽  
L. N. Tang ◽  
...  

1988 ◽  
Vol 62 (01) ◽  
pp. 141-143 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gerard M. Thomas ◽  
George O. Poinar

A sporulating Aspergillus is described from a piece of Eocene amber originating from the Dominican Republic. The Aspergillus most closely resembles a form of the white spored phase of Aspergillus janus Raper and Thom. This is the first report of a fossil species of Aspergillus.


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