scholarly journals First Report of Acidovorax avenae subsp. avenae Causing Bacterial Leaf Stripe of Canna sp. in the Southeastern United States

Plant Disease ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 102 (10) ◽  
pp. 2026-2026
Author(s):  
G. Sanahuja ◽  
P. Lopez ◽  
A. R. Chase
2013 ◽  
Vol 106 (6) ◽  
pp. 2391-2398 ◽  
Author(s):  
Angela M. Mech ◽  
Christopher Asaro ◽  
Michelle M. Cram ◽  
David R. Coyle ◽  
Penelope J. Gullan ◽  
...  

Plant Disease ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 88 (5) ◽  
pp. 576-576 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. N. Jeffers ◽  
G. Schnabel ◽  
J. P. Smith

Phytophthora cactorum causes crown rot of strawberry (Fragaria × ananassa) (2), a disease that has been particularly severe during the last 5 years in the southeastern United States. In the fall of 2001, strawberry plants (cv. Camarosa) in a field in Lexington County, South Carolina exhibited typical crown rot symptoms (2) 1 to 2 weeks after transplanting, even though plants had been drenched with mefenoxam (Ridomil Gold; Syngenta Crop Protection, Greensboro, NC) immediately after transplanting. Initially, we observed leaves that had marginal necrosis, were smaller than normal, and were discolored. Soon after, diseased plants appeared stunted and unthrifty compared with other plants in the field, and some of these plants eventually wilted and died. Severely affected plants had necrotic roots and decayed crowns. Ten symptomatic plants were collected for isolation. In the laboratory, root and crown tissues were rinsed in running tap water and blotted dry, small pieces of necrotic tissue were placed aseptically on PAR-V8 selective medium (1), and isolation plates were placed at 20°C in the dark for up to 7 days. P. cactorum was recovered from six plants. Isolates produced characteristic asexual and sexual structures directly on the isolation plates (i.e., papillate sporangia on sympodial sporangiophores and oospores with paragynous antheridia) (2). A single hypha of an isolate from each plant was transferred to fresh PAR-V8, and pure cultures were stored on cornmeal agar in glass vials at 15°C in the dark. All six isolates from the Lexington County field and nine other isolates of P. cactorum from strawberry (three from South Carolina, three from North Carolina, and three from Florida) were tested for sensitivity to mefenoxam on fungicide-amended medium. Mefenoxam was added to 10% clarified V8 juice agar (cV8A) after autoclaving so the concentration in the medium was 100 ppm. Agar plugs from active colonies were transferred to mefenoxam-amended and nonamended cV8A (three replicates per treatment), plates were placed at 25°C in the dark for 3 days, and linear mycelium growth was measured. All six isolates from Lexington County were highly resistant to mefenoxam with mycelium growth relatively unrestricted on mefenoxam-amended medium (73 to 89% of that on nonamended medium). In comparison, the other nine isolates were sensitive to mefenoxam with mycelium growth severely restricted by 100 ppm of mefenoxam (0 to 7% of that on nonamended medium). To our knowledge, this is the first report of mefenoxam resistance in P. cactorum on strawberry or any other crop in the United States and elsewhere. Because mefenoxam is the primary fungicide used to manage Phytophthora crown rot in the southeastern United States, resistance may limit use of this fungicide in strawberry production. References: (1) A. J. Ferguson and S. N. Jeffers. Plant Dis. 83:1129, 1999. (2) E. Seemüller. Crown rot. Pages 50–51 in: Compendium of Strawberry Diseases, 2nd ed. J. L. Maas, ed. The American Phytopathological Society, St. Paul, MN, 1998.


1973 ◽  
Vol 51 (3) ◽  
pp. 571-580 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dale H. Vitt ◽  
Michael Ostafichuk ◽  
Irwin M. Brodo

Four species of mosses, all in the genus Orthotrichum; 1 species of hepatics; and 16 species of lichens compose the foliicolous bryophyte and lichen flora of Thuja plicata L. leaves in certain areas of western British Columbia. This is the first report of foliicolous mosses and hepatics for North America, north of the tropical and subtropical regions of the southeastern United States. The taxonomy of the four species of Orthotrichum is discussed and a key given differentiating the species.All of the species that have been found on Thuja leaves except perhaps Catillaria bouteillei are facultative foliicolous species and occur on leaves, only in scattered areas of northwestern North America. Two taxa of lichens, Catillaria bouteillei (Desm.) Zahlbr. and Cetrelia cetrarioides (Del. ex Duby) W. Culb. & C. Culb. (perlatolic acid strain) are reported as new to Canada.


Plant Disease ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 93 (4) ◽  
pp. 432-432 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. E. Tzanetakis ◽  
T. L. Guzmán-Baeny ◽  
Z. P. VanEsbroeck ◽  
G. E. Fernandez ◽  
R. R. Martin

Blackberry yellow vein disease (BYVD) has emerged as an important disease of blackberry (Rubus spp.) in the south and southeastern United States (2,3). In an effort to characterize viruses that may be involved in the disease, double-stranded RNA extracted from a symptomatic ‘Apache’ blackberry from South Carolina was used for shotgun cDNA cloning (4). Sequence analysis showed that in addition to Blackberry yellow vein associated virus (BYVaV) (2), a constant component of BYVD, sequences of Impatiens necrotic spot virus (INSV) also were obtained. The 623-nt fragment of INSV (Genbank Accession No. EU287930) shared 98% nucleotide and amino acid sequence identity with GenBank Accession No. NC003616. Confirmation of the results of the initial shotgun cloning was done by reverse transcription-PCR with primers INSVF (5′ GATCTGTCCTGGGATTGTTC 3′) and INSVR (5′ GTCTCCTTCTGGTTCTATAATCAT 3′) that amplify a 460 base fragment of the M RNA of INSV. Amplicons obtained from single-stranded and dsRNA templates were sequenced and found to be identical with EU287930. The identity of INSV by PCR was also supported by positive results with a commercially available INSV-ELISA kit (AC Diagnostics, Fayetteville, AR). Earlier, more than 400 plants from North Carolina, South Carolina, and Virginia with BYVD and other virus-like symptoms were tested for INSV by ELISA and approximately 33% were found to be infected with the virus (1). Thus, INSV appears to be one of the major viruses infecting blackberry in the southeastern United States, and it remains to be seen if INSV acts synergistically with BYVaV and other viruses to contribute to the severity of BYDV. To our knowledge, this is the first report of INSV infecting Rubus spp. References: (1) T. L. Guzmán-Baeny. M.S. thesis. North Carolina State University, Raleigh, 2003. (2) J. Susaimuthu et al. Plant Pathol. 55:607, 2006. (3) J. Susaimuthu et al. Virus Res. 131:145, 2008. (4) I. E. Tzanetakis et al. J. Virol. Methods 124:73, 2005.


Plant Disease ◽  
2003 ◽  
Vol 87 (1) ◽  
pp. 102-102 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. L. Hughes ◽  
S. W. Scott

Leaves displaying bright yellow or light green line pattern symptoms were collected from individual, large, mature buddleias in a home garden in Clemson, SC, a botanical garden in Knoxville, TN, and a container-grown plant on sale in a retail home and garden store in Seneca, SC. Buddleias grown in the southeastern United States frequently display virus-like symptoms, but the line pattern symptom displayed by these plants was atypical of the mosaic, mottling, and leaf deformation seen when buddleias are infected with Alfalfa mosaic virus (AMV) or Cucumber mosaic virus (CMV) (2,4). Line pattern symptoms are frequently seen in woody species infected by ilarviruses or nepoviruses (2). No ilarviruses are reported to infect buddleia and only the nepovirus, Strawberry latent ringspot virus, which is restricted mainly to Europe, is reported to infect this species (1,2). The nepoviruses Tomato ringspot virus (ToRSV) and Tobacco ringspot virus (TRSV) are frequently found infecting plants of many species in the southeastern United States (3). Total RNA was extracted from the three symptomatic plants and used in reverse transcription-polymerase chain reactions (RT-PCR) to detect ToRSV and TRSV using primer pairs developed in this laboratory, which amplify regions around the amino terminus of the coat protein of the respective viruses. The expected amplification product for ToRSV of 327 base pairs was obtained from samples tested from each plant, and the nucleotide sequence of the product showed 96% identity with the corresponding fragment of GenBank Accession No. NC_003839 that the primers were designed to amplify. Repeated attempts to isolate a virus from symptomatic leaves using sap inoculation to Chenopodium amaranticolor Coste & Reyne, C. quinoa Willd, Nicotiana clevelandii Gray, and N. tabacum L. have failed. Repeated testing by double-antibody sandwich enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (DAS-ELISA) of leaves from the plant growing in Clemson consistently produced absorbance values at 405 nm in the range of 0.47 to 0.55 (mean of 8 separate samples per test) for symptomatic and asymptomatic leaves. The range of values for the positive control (ToRSV-G growing in N. clevelandii) was 1.3 to 1.5. The ranges of values for the noninfected controls (noninfected N. clevelandii and leaf tissue from a buddleia known to be infected with AMV and CMV but in which ToRSV or TRSV had never been detected by RT-PCR) were 0.102 to 0.104 and 0.102 to 0.106, respectively. The extraction buffer produced absorbance readings in the range of 0.098 to 0.102. RT-PCR of RNA extracted from other portions of the leaves used in the ELISA consistently amplified the 327-bp product from symptomatic leaves and from the positive control but not from noninfected control tissues. RNA from asymptomatic leaves on the infected plant also produced the 327-bp product in RT-PCR. Isolation of viruses from woody hosts is frequently difficult, and although, we have yet to succeed to confirm the association between the observed symptom and ToRSV, the evidence from PCR and ELISA would indicate ToRSV is present in these plants. To our knowledge, this is the first report of ToRSV, a member of the genus Nepovirus, in buddleia. References: (1) J. Albouy and J. C. Devergne. Maladies á Virus des Plants Ornementales. INRA Editions, Paris, 1998. (2) J. I. Cooper. Virus Diseases of Trees and Shrubs. 2nd ed. Chapman and Hill, London, 1993. (3) J. R. Edwards and R. G. Christie. Pages 352–353 in: Handbook of Viruses Infecting Legumes. CRC Press, Boca Raton, FL, 1991. (4) C. J. Perkins and R. G. T. Hicks. Plant Pathol. 38:443, 1989.


Plant Disease ◽  
2003 ◽  
Vol 87 (10) ◽  
pp. 1265-1265 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. G. Pratt

Bipolaris sorokiniana (Sacc.) Shoemaker is a major foliar and root-infecting pathogen of cool-season forage and turf grasses and small grains in the southeastern United States (2). In North America, B. sorokiniana has been reported from bermudagrass (Cynodon dactylon [L.] Pers.) once in California in 1961 (1), and rarely from other warm-season grasses in the southeastern United States. In May, July, September, and October 2002, B. sorokiniana sporulation was observed on leaves of common bermudagrass exhibiting necrotic lesions and dieback in waste application fields on three commercial swine farms in Chickasaw, Lowndes, and Webster counties, MS. Leaves were collected (50 per farm per month), surface-disinfested, plated on water agar, and observed for fungal sporulation on leaf surfaces after 7 to 10 days (3,4). The pathogen was detected on 1 to 3 farms each month in leaves that were infected with numerous other dematiaceous hyphomycetes (3,4). Three randomly selected single-spore isolates of B. sorokiniana from each of bermudagrass and annual ryegrass (Lolium multiflorum Lam.), collected at the Webster County farm, were compared for select features of morphology and pathogenicity on bermudagrass. Isolates differed significantly in growth rates, amount of sporulation, and spore sizes on cornmeal agar, but differences were not consistently related to hosts of origin. In plants inoculated by atomizing equal quantities of spores (2.8 × 104/ml) onto foliage, isolates of B. sorokiniana from bermudagrass and ryegrass both caused significantly (P = 0.05) more severe foliar necrosis after 10 days than B. cynodontis (5 pots of seeded plants per treatment in each of two experiments). B. sorokiniana was reisolated from disinfested, symptomatic bermudagrass leaf tissue following inoculations. To our knowledge, this is the first report of B. sorokiniana on bermudagrass in North America outside of California (1) and indicates that this pathogen is highly virulent on bermudagrass in the southeastern United States (3,4). Of potentially greater importance is the fact that one of the most common and widespread forage and turf grass species in the southeastern United States can serve as an alternate host for maintenance and increase of inoculum of B. sorokiniana during summer months. References: (1) R. M. Endo. Plant Dis. Rep. 45:869, 1961. (2) D. F. Farr et al. Fungal Databases. Systematic Botany and Mycology Laboratory, On-line publication. ARS, USDA, 2003. (3) R. G. Pratt. Agron. J. 92:512, 2000. (4) R. G. Pratt. Plant Dis. 85:1206, 2001.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jorge Noguera

This study was conducted to determine the effectiveness of a novel mind perception manipulation. Mind perception is currently theorized to be an essential aspect of a number of human social psychological processes. Thus, a successful manipulation would allow for the causal study of those processes. This manipulation was created in an attempt to explore the downstream impact of mind perception on the endorsement of conspiracy theories. Conspiracy theories are steadily becoming more and more prominent in social discourse. Endorsement of conspiracy theories are beginning to show real world ramifications such as a danger to human health (e.g., in the anti-vaccination movement). A sample of college students (valid N = 53) from a large rural institution in the southeastern United States participated for course credit. These participants completed a mind perception pretest, were randomly assigned to either the manipulation in question (in which participants are asked to consider the ‘mind’ of several targets and write their thoughts about them) or the control condition, and then they completed a posttest. The mixed ANOVA revealed that the interaction term between Time and Condition was not significant. Because the manipulation did not work, other analyses were aborted, in accord with the pre-registration. My Discussion focuses on the procedures and potential shortcomings of this manipulation, in an effort to lay the groundwork for a successful one.


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