scholarly journals First Report of Flyspeck Caused by Zygophiala wisconsinensis on Sweet Persimmon Fruit in Korea

Plant Disease ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 95 (5) ◽  
pp. 616-616 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Kim ◽  
O. Choi ◽  
J.-H. Kwon

Sweet persimmon (Diospyros kaki L.), a fruit tree in the Ebenaceae, is cultivated widely in Korea and Japan, the leading producers worldwide (2). Sweet persimmon fruit with flyspeck symptoms were collected from orchards in the Jinju area of Korea in November 2010. The fruit had fungal clusters of black, round to ovoid, sclerotium-like fungal bodies with no visible evidence of a mycelial mat. Orchard inspections revealed that disease incidence ranged from 10 to 20% in the surveyed area (approximately 10 ha) in 2010. Flyspeck symptoms were observed on immature and mature fruit. Sweet persimmon fruit peels with flyspeck symptoms were removed, dried, and individual speck lesions transferred to potato dextrose agar (PDA) and cultured at 22°C in the dark. Fungal isolates were obtained from flyspeck colonies on 10 sweet persimmon fruit harvested from each of three orchards. Fungal isolates that grew from the lesions were identified based on a previous description (1). To confirm identity of the causal fungus, the complete internal transcribed spacer (ITS) rDNA sequence of a representative isolate was amplified and sequenced using primers ITS1 and ITS4 (4). The resulting 552-bp sequence was deposited in GenBank (Accession No. HQ698923). Comparison with ITS rDNA sequences showed 100% similarity with a sequence of Zygophiala wisconsinensis Batzer & Crous (GenBank Accession No. AY598855), which infects apple. To fulfill Koch's postulates, mature, intact sweet persimmon fruit were surface sterilized with 70% ethanol and dried. Three fungal isolates from this study were grown on PDA for 1 month. A colonized agar disc (5 mm in diameter) of each isolate was cut from the advancing margin of a colony with a sterilized cork borer, transferred to a 1.5-ml Eppendorf tube, and ground into a suspension of mycelial fragments and conidia in a blender with 1 ml of sterile, distilled water. The inoculum of each isolate was applied by swabbing a sweet persimmon fruit with the suspension. Three sweet persimmon fruit were inoculated per isolate. Three fruit were inoculated similarly with sterile, distilled water as the control treatment. After 1 month of incubation in a moist chamber at 22°C, the same fungal fruiting symptoms were reproduced as observed in the orchards, and the fungus was reisolated from these symptoms, but not from the control fruit, which were asymptomatic. On the basis of morphological characteristics of the fungal colonies, ITS sequence, and pathogenicity to persimmon fruit, the fungus was identified as Z. wisconsinensis (1). Flyspeck is readily isolated from sweet persimmon fruit in Korea and other sweet persimmon growing regions (3). The exposure of fruit to unusual weather conditions in Korea in recent years, including drought, and low-temperature and low-light situations in late spring, which are favorable for flyspeck, might be associated with an increase in occurrence of flyspeck on sweet persimmon fruit in Korea. To our knowledge, this is the first report of Z. wisconsinensis causing flyspeck on sweet persimmon in Korea. References: (1) J. C. Batzer et al. Mycologia 100:246, 2008. (2) FAOSTAT Database. Retrieved from http://faostat.fao.org/ , 2008. (3) H. Nasu and H. Kunoh. Plant Dis. 71:361, 1987. (4) T. J. White et al. Page 315 in: PCR Protocols: A Guide to Methods and Applications. M. A. Innis et al., eds. Academic Press, Inc., New York, 1990.

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):  
Jiahao Lai ◽  
Guihong Xiong ◽  
Bing Liu ◽  
Weigang Kuang ◽  
Shuilin Song

Blueberry (Vaccinium virgatum), an economically important small fruit crop, is characterized by its highly nutritive compounds and high content and wide diversity of bioactive compounds (Miller et al. 2019). In September 2020, an unknown leaf blight disease was observed on Rabbiteye blueberry at the Agricultural Science and Technology Park of Jiangxi Agricultural University in Nanchang, China (28°45'51"N, 115°50'52"E). Disease surveys were conducted at that time, the results showed that disease incidence was 90% from a sampled population of 100 plants in the field, and this disease had not been found at other cultivation fields in Nanchang. Leaf blight disease on blueberry caused the leaves to shrivel and curl, or even fall off, which hindered floral bud development and subsequent yield potential. Symptoms of the disease initially appeared as irregular brown spots (1 to 7 mm in diameter) on the leaves, subsequently coalescing to form large irregular taupe lesions (4 to 15 mm in diameter) which became curly. As the disease progressed, irregular grey-brown and blighted lesion ran throughout the leaf lamina from leaf tip to entire leaf sheath and finally caused dieback and even shoot blight. To identify the causal agent, 15 small pieces (5 mm2) of symptomatic leaves were excised from the junction of diseased and healthy tissue, surface-sterilized in 75% ethanol solution for 30 sec and 0.1% mercuric chloride solution for 2 min, rinsed three times with sterile distilled water, and then incubated on potato dextrose agar (PDA) at 28°C for 5-7 days in darkness. Five fungal isolates showing similar morphological characteristics were obtained as pure cultures by single-spore isolation. All fungal colonies on PDA were white with sparse creeping hyphae. Pycnidia were spherical, light brown, and produced numerous conidia. Conidia were 10.60 to 20.12 × 1.98 to 3.11 µm (average 15.27 × 2.52 µm, n = 100), fusiform, sickle-shaped, light brown, without septa. Based on morphological characteristics, the fungal isolates were suspected to be Coniella castaneicola (Cui 2015). To further confirm the identity of this putative pathogen, two representative isolates LGZ2 and LGZ3 were selected for molecular identification. The internal transcribed spacer region (ITS) and large subunit (LSU) were amplified and sequenced using primers ITS1/ITS4 (Peever et al. 2004) and LROR/LR7 (Castlebury and Rossman 2002). The sequences of ITS region (GenBank accession nos. MW672530 and MW856809) showed 100% identity with accessions numbers KF564280 (576/576 bp), MW208111 (544/544 bp), MW208112 (544/544 bp) of C. castaneicola. LSU gene sequences (GenBank accession nos. MW856810 to 11) was 99.85% (1324/1326 bp, 1329/1331 bp) identical to the sequences of C. castaneicola (KY473971, KR232683 to 84). Pathogenicity was tested on three blueberry varieties (‘Rabbiteye’, ‘Double Peak’ and ‘Pink Lemonade’), and four healthy young leaves of a potted blueberry of each variety with and without injury were inoculated with 20 μl suspension of prepared spores (106 conidia/mL) derived from 7-day-old cultures of LGZ2, respectively. In addition, four leaves of each variety with and without injury were sprayed with sterile distilled water as a control, respectively. The experiment was repeated three times, and all plants were incubated in a growth chamber (a 12h light and 12h dark period, 25°C, RH greater than 80%). After 4 days, all the inoculated leaves started showing disease symptoms (large irregular grey-brown lesions) as those observed in the field and there was no difference in severity recorded between the blueberry varieties, whereas the control leaves showed no symptoms. The fungus was reisolated from the inoculated leaves and confirmed as C. castaneicola by morphological and molecular identification, fulfilling Koch’s postulates. To our knowledge, this is the first report of C. castaneicola causing leaf blight on blueberries in China. The discovery of this new disease and the identification of the pathogen will provide useful information for developing effective control strategies, reducing economic losses in blueberry production, and promoting the development of the blueberry industry.


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 ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tao Luo ◽  
Guoqing Li ◽  
Long Yang

Oilseed rape (Brassica napus L.) is one of the most important oilseed crops in China. It is widely cultivated in China, with winter oilseed rape in Yangtze River basin and in southern China, and spring oilseed rape in northern China. In August 2017, a survey for Leptosphaeria spp. on spring oilseed rape was conducted in Minle county, Zhangye city, Gansu Province, China. The symptoms typical of blackleg on basal stems of oilseed rape were observed in the field. A large number of black fruiting bodies (pycnidia) were present on the lesions (Fig. 1A). The disease incidence of basal stem infection in the surveyed field was 19%. A total of 19 diseased stems were collected to isolate the pathogen. After surface sterilizing (75% ethanol for 30 s, 5% NaOCl for 60 s, followed by rinsing in sterilized water three times), diseased tissues were cultured on acidified potato dextrose agar (PDA) plates at 20°C for 7 days. Twelve fungal isolates were obtained. All fungal isolates produced typical tan pigment on PDA medium, and produced pycnidia after two weeks (Fig. 1B). Colony morphological characteristics indicated that these isolates might belong to Leptosphaeria biglobosa. To confirm identification, multiple PCR was conducted using the species-specific primers LmacF, LbigF, LmacR (Liu et al. 2006). Genomic DNA of each isolate was extracted using the cetyltrimethylammonium bromide (CTAB) method. DNA samples of L. maculans isolate UK-1 and L. biglobosa isolate W10 (Cai et al. 2015) were used as references. Only a 444-bp DNA band was detected in all 12 isolates and W10, whereas a 333-bp DNA band was detected only in the UK-1 isolate (Fig. 1C). PCR results suggested that these 12 isolates all belong to L. biglobosa. In addition, the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region of these 12 isolates was analyzed for subspecies identification (Vincenot et al. 2008). Phylogenetic analysis based on ITS sequence showed that five isolates (Lb1134, Lb1136, Lb1138, Lb1139 and Lb1143) belonged to L. biglobosa ‘brassicae’ (Lbb) with 78% bootstrap support, and the other seven isolates (Lb1135, Lb1137, Lb1140, Lb1141, Lb1142, Lb1144 and Lb1145) belonged to L. biglobosa ‘canadensis’ (Lbc) with 95% bootstrap support (Fig. 1D). Two Lbb isolates (Lb1134 and Lb1136) and two Lbc isolates (Lb1142 and Lb1144) were randomly selected for pathogenicity testing on B. napus cultivar Zhongshuang No. 9 (Wang et al. 2002). Conidial suspensions (10 μL, 1 × 107 conidia mL-1) of these four isolates were inoculated on needle-wounded cotyledons (14-day-old seedling), with 10 cotyledons (20 wounded sites) per isolate. A further 10 wounded cotyledons were inoculated with water and served as controls. Seedlings were maintained in a growth chamber at 20°C with 100% relative humidity and a 12-h photoperiod. After 7 days, cotyledons inoculated with the four isolates showed necrotic lesions in the inoculated wounds. Control cotyledons had no symptoms (Fig. 2). Fungi re-isolated from the infected cotyledons showed similar colony morphology as the original isolates. Therefore, L. biglobosa ‘brassicae’ and L. biglobosa ‘canadensis’ appear to be the pathogens causing the observed blackleg symptoms on spring oilseed rape in Gansu, China. In previous studies, L. biglobosa ‘brassicae’ has been found in many crops in China, including oilseed rape (Liu et al. 2014; Cai et al. 2015), Chinese radish (Raphanus sativus) (Cai et al. 2014a), B. campestris ssp. chinensis var. purpurea (Cai et al. 2014b), broccoli (B. oleracea var. italica) (Luo et al. 2018), ornamental kale (B. oleracea var. acephala) (Zhou et al. 2019a), B. juncea var. multiceps (Zhou et al. 2019b), B. juncea var. tumida (Deng et al. 2020) and Chinese cabbage (B. rapa subsp. pekinensis) (Yu et al. 2021 accepted). To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report of L. biglobosa ‘canadensis’ causing blackleg on B. napus in China.


Plant Disease ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jiahao Lai ◽  
Tongke Liu ◽  
Bing Liu ◽  
Weigang Kuang ◽  
Shuilin Song

Sweet potato [Ipomoea batatas (L.) Lam], is an extremely versatile vegetable that possesses high nutritional values. It is also a valuable medicinal plant having anti-cancer, antidiabetic, and anti-inflammatory activities. In July 2020, leaf spot was observed on leaves of sweet potato in Nanchang, China (28°45'51"N, 115°50'52"E), which affected the growth and development of the crop and caused tuberous roots yield losses of 25%. The disease incidence (total number of diseased plants / total number of surveyed plants × 100%) was 57% from a sampled population of 100 plants in the field. Symptomatic plants initially exhibited small, light brown, irregular-shaped spots on the leaves, subsequently coalescing to form large irregular brown lesions and some lesions finally fell off. Fifteen small pieces (each 5 mm2) of symptomatic leaves were excised from the junction of diseased and healthy tissue, surface sterilized in 75% ethanol solution for 30 sec and 0.1% mercuric chloride solution for 2 min, rinsed three times with sterile distilled water and incubated on potato dextrose agar (PDA) plates at 28°C in darkness. A total of seven fungal isolates with similar morphological characteristics were obtained as pure cultures by single-spore isolation. After 5 days of cultivation at 28°C, dark brown or blackish green colonies were observed, which developed brown, thick-walled, simple, or branched, and septate conidiophores. Conidia were 18.28 to 24.91 × 7.46 to 11.69 µm (average 21.27 × 9.48 µm, n = 100) in size, straight or slightly curved, middle cell unequally enlarged, brown to dark brown, apical, and basal cells slightly paler than the middle cells, with three septa. Based on morphological characteristics, the fungal isolates were suspected to be Curvularia plantarum (Raza et al. 2019). To further confirm the identification, three isolates (LGZ1, LGZ4 and LGZ5) were selected for molecular identification. The internal transcribed spacer region (ITS), glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate-dehydrogenase (GAPDH), and translation elongation factor 1-alpha (EF1-α) genes were amplified and sequenced using primers ITS1/ITS4 (Peever et al. 2004), gpd1/gpd2 (Berbee et al. 1999), EF-983F/EF-2218R (Rehner and Buckley 2005), respectively. The sequences of ITS region of the three isolates (accession nos. MW581905, MZ209268, and MZ227555) shared 100% identity with those of C. plantarum (accession nos. MT410571-72, MN044754-55). Their GAPDH gene sequences were identical (accession nos. MZ224017-19) and shared 100% identity with C. plantarum (accession nos. MN264120, MT432926, and MN053037-38). Similarly, EF1-α gene sequences were identical (accession nos. MZ224020-22) and had 100% identity with C. plantarum (accession nos. MT628901, MN263982-83). A maximum likelihood phylogenetic tree was built based on concatenated data from the sequences of ITS, GAPDH, and EF-1α by using MEGA 5. The three isolates LGZ1, LGZ4, and LGZ5 clustered with C. plantarum. The fungus was identified as C. plantarum by combining morphological and molecular characteristics. Pathogenicity tests were conducted by inoculating a conidial suspension (106 conidia/ml) on three healthy potted I. batatas plants (five leaves wounded with sterile needle of each potted plant were inoculated). In addition, fifteen wounded leaves of three potted plants were sprayed with sterile distilled water as a control. All plants were maintained in a climate box (12 h light/dark) at 25°C with 80% relative humidity. All the inoculated leaves started showing light brown flecks after 7 days, whereas the control leaves showed no symptoms. The pathogenicity test was conducted three times. The fungus was reisolated from all infected leaves of potted plants and confirmed as C. plantarum by morphological and molecular identification, fulfilling Koch’s postulates. To our knowledge, this is the first report of C. plantarum causing leaf spot on sweet potato in China. The discovery of this new disease and the identification of the pathogen will contribute to the disease management, provide useful information for reducing economic losses caused by C. plantarum, and lay a foundation for the further research of resistance breeding.


Plant Disease ◽  
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wen Li ◽  
Yue-qiu He ◽  
Tao Fu ◽  
Li Lin ◽  
Feng Liu ◽  
...  

Zinnia elegans (syn. Zinnia violacea), known as common zinnia, is one of the most spectacular ornamental plants in the family Asteraceae. Zinnia plants are widely cultivated in China for their impressive range in flower colours and profuse bloom over a long period. In April 2019, Zinnia plants grown in Ningbo Botanical Garden (29°56′57″N, 121°36′20″E) were found to have many circular necrotic lesions. In the early infection stage, the lesions appeared as small circular specks which developed later into large spots (15 to 32 mm diameter). Typical symptoms appeared to be grayish white centers with a chlorotic edges and disease incidence reached approximately 80% of plants in the affected field. Moreover, the growth of Zinnia plants was seriously affected by the disease. To identify the causative pathogen associated with the disease, 10 symptomatic leaves were collected from ten different Zinnia plants. Leaf tissues were cut from the lesion margins, surface sterilized with 75% ethanol for 30 seconds and rinsed three times in sterile distilled water. The leaf tissues were then dipped into 10% sodium hypochlorite for 2-3 minutes, washed three times in distilled water and dried on a sterile filter paper. After drying, the surface-sterilized leaf discs were transferred to potato dextrose agar (PDA) plates and incubated at 28°C for 2 to 3 days under the 12 h photoperiod. A total of ten pure fungal isolates were obtained and all the isolates displayed the same colony structure. Afterwards, three pure strains were randomly selected (F1, F3 and F5) for further study. The fungal colonies showed gray to brownish aerial mycelia with pink-colored masses of conidia. Conidia were one-celled, hyaline, cylindrical to subcylindrical, spindle-shaped with obtuse ends, measuring from 15.6 to 17.3 × 4.6 to 5.1 μm with both ends rounded. These morphological characteristics were consistent with the description of Colletotrichum gloeosporioides complex (Weir et al. 2012). The identity of a representative isolate, F3, was confirmed by a multilocus approach. Genomic DAN of isolate F3 was extracted and partial sequences of actin (ACT), chitin synthase (CHS), glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH), ribosomal internal transcribed spacer (ITS), manganese-superoxide dismutase (SOD2) , glutamine synthatase (GS), beta-tubulin (TUB2) and calmodulin (CAL) were amplified and sequenced as previously described (Weir et al. 2012). These nucleotide sequences were deposited in GenBank (accession MN972436 to MN972440, and MT266559 to MT266561; all sequences in FASTA format are shown (Supplementary S1). BLAST analysis of ITS, ACT, CHS, GAPDH and GS sequences from the F3 isolate revealed similarity to C. gloeosporioides voucher strain ZH01 with 100%, 100%,99%, 99% and 99% identity, respectively. SOD, TUB2 and CAL sequences showed similarity to C. siamense with 100%, 100% and 100% identity, respectively. The phylogenetic trees were constructed by Maximum Likelihood method (ML) using JTT model implemented in the MEGA 7. Results inferred from the concatenated sequences (ACT, CHS, GAPDH, ITS, SOD, GS, TUB2 and CAL) placed the isolate F3 within the C. siamense cluster (Supplementary S2). To confirm pathogenicity of the fungus, Koch’s postulates were conducted by spraying 20 Zinnia plants (60-day-old) with a 1 × 106 conidia/ml suspension. Plants were maintained in the growth chamber at 25°C and 85% relative humidity. After 10 to 15 days, symptoms were observed on all inoculated leaves and resembled those observed in the field, whereas the control plants remained asymptomatic. Here, C. siamense was isolated only from the infected Zinnia leaves and identified by morphological and gene sequencing analyses. C. siamense has been reported in many crops in China (Yang et al. 2019; Chen et al. 2019; Wang et al. 2019). However, to our knowledge, this is the first report of anthracnose caused by C. siamense on Zinnia elegans in China. References Chen, X., Wang, T., Guo, H., Zhu, P. K., and Xu, L. 2019. First report of anthracnose of Camellia sasanqua caused by Colletotrichum siamense in China. Plant Dis. 103:1423-1423. Wang, Y., Qin, H. Y., Liu, Y. X., Fan, S. T., Sun, D., Yang, Y. M., Li, C. Y., and Ai, J. 2019. First report of anthracnose caused by Colletotrichum siamense on Actinidia arguta in China. Plant Dis. 103:372-373. Weir, B. S., Johnston, P. R., and Damm, U. 2012. The Colletotrichum gloeosporioides species complex. Stud. Mycol. 73: 115-180. Yang, S., Wang, H. X., Yi, Y. J., and Tan, L. L. 2019. First report that Colletotrichum siamense causes leaf spots on Camellia japonica in China. Plant Dis. 103:2127-2127.


Plant Disease ◽  
1999 ◽  
Vol 83 (11) ◽  
pp. 1073-1073 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. E. Adaskaveg ◽  
H. Förster ◽  
J. H. Connell

A fruit rot of almond (Prunus dulcis (Mill.) D. Webb.) was observed in an orchard in Durham, CA (Butte County), in June of 1998 after an unusually wet spring with a total precipitation of 17.2 cm for April and May. Disease incidence on fully developed fruit of almond cv. Sonora was nearly 90% in the lower tree canopy by July. Almond cv. Nonpareil grown in alternate rows in the same orchard was much less affected. Fruit symptoms included extensive grayish brown discolored and shriveled hulls, often associated with a clear gum secretion and shriveled kernels. Affected fruit frequently abscised. Leaf symptoms and branch dieback were not associated with the disease in 1998. In May of 1999, however, extensive twig dieback was observed on almond cv. Sonora in the same orchard. Isolations from more than 100 symptomatic fruit were conducted from 9 sampling sites in the 9-ha orchard. Based on morphological characteristics, the same fungus was isolated from 93% of the fruit. The fungus also was isolated consistently from samples exhibiting twig dieback. During a major disease survey conducted in 1998, the fungus was only incidentally isolated from almond fruit from other California orchards. Ascomata were not observed in vivo or in vitro. The fungus produced alpha and beta spores in pycnidia when cultured on potato dextrose agar. Spore measurements were obtained from 10 spores for each of 3 isolates obtained from fruit or twig dieback of almond cv. Sonora. Conidial dimensions of fruit and twig isolates were very similar. Based on spore sizes, with alpha spores measuring 5.3 to 7.5 (to 8) × 1.7 to 2.5 μm and beta spores measuring12.8 to 29.8 × 0.6 to 0.7 μm, the fungus was tentatively identified as Phomopsis amygdali (Del.) Tuset & Portilla (2). Previous reports on this fungus (2), however, indicated that beta spores are not produced in culture, and disease symptoms have not been observed on fruit. The fungus was morphologically different from other species of Phomopsis reported from almond and other Prunus species, including P. mali Roberts, P. padina (Sacc. & Roum.) Died., P. parabolica Petrak, P. perniciosa Grove, P. pruni (Ellis & Dearn.) Wehm., P. prunorum (Cooke) Grove, P. ribetejana Camara, and P. stipata (Lib.) Sutton (3). Field inoculation studies were performed in May of 1999 on almond cvs. Carmel and Mission. Almond fruit were wounded (2 × 2 × 2 mm) or left unwounded and were sprayed with water (control) or a suspension of alpha spores (105 spores per ml). Branches were bagged for 4 days to maintain high humidity. Fruit symptoms on cv. Carmel were observed after 4 weeks on wounded and nonwounded inoculated fruit, and P. amygdali was successfully reisolated from diseased tissue. No symptoms were observed in the control treatment for almond cv. Carmel or in any treatment for cv. Mission. This is the first report of P. amygdali causing a late spring and summer fruit rot and associated branch dieback of almond in North America (1). References: (1) D. F. Farr et al. 1989. Fungi on Plants and Plant Products in the United States. The American Phytopathological Society, St. Paul, MN. (2) J. J. Tuset and M. T. Portilla. Taxonomic status of Fusicoccum amygdali and Phomopsis amygdalina. Can. J. Bot. 67:1275, 1989. (3) F. A. Uecker. 1988. A World List of Phomopsis Names with Notes on Nomenclature, Morphology, and Biology. Mycologia Memoir No. 13. J. Cramer, Berlin.


Plant Disease ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Donghun Kang ◽  
Jungyeon Kim ◽  
Youn Mi Lee ◽  
Balaraju Kotnala ◽  
Yongho Jeon

In September 2020, typical anthracnose symptoms were observed on cotton (Gossypium indicum Lam.) leaves growing in Hahoe village, Andong, Gyeongbuk Province, Korea. The leaves of the infected plants initially showed spots with halo-lesions which became enlarged and spread to the entire leaf surface area. The infected leaves later became yellowish and chlorotic (Fig. 1A). The disease incidence was at least 90% in the field. For pathogen isolation, fresh samples collected from symptomatic leaves were cut into small pieces (4 to 5 mm2), surface-sterilized in 1% sodium hypochlorite for 1 min, rinsed three times, and macerated in sterile distilled water (SDW). They were spread onto potato dextrose agar (PDA) plates and incubated at 25 °C for 5 days under a 12-h photoperiod. Five isolates were recovered from the infected leaves. Purified fungal colonies were initially white, later turned yellow on PDA medium. Conidia were yellow-colored, smooth-walled, aseptate, straight or slightly distorted, and cylindrical with one end slightly acute or with broadly rounded ends, and with size ranges from 15.3 to 17.5 µm (length) × 4.5 to 5.2 µm (width) (Fig. 1B). The morphological characteristics of the present isolates were consistent with those of Colletotrichum gloeosporioides (Weir et al. 2012). A single isolate, ANUK97, was selected for identification. The multilocus sequence analysis (MLSA) of the actin (ACT), calmodulin (CAL), glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH), internal transcribed spacer (ITS) rDNA, and β-tubulin (Tub2) were amplified by PCR with the primer pairs of ACT-521F/ACT-783R, CL1C/CL2C, GDF/GDR, ITS1/ITS4, and T1/T2, respectively (White et al. 1990). The resulting sequences were deposited in GenBank under accession numbers MW580367 (ACT), MW580368 (CAL), MW580369 (GAPDH), MW580370 (ITS), and MW580371 (TUB2). A nucleotide BLAST search revealed that ACT, CAL, GAPDH, ITS, and TUB2 sequences be 99% similar to accession numbers MN307380.1, MH155176.1, MK796226.1, MW580370.1, and JX010377.1, respectively of C. theobromicola. Maximum likelihood (ML) phylogenetic analysis was conducted based on a combined dataset of ACT, CAL, GAPDH, ITS, and TUB2 sequences using MEGA-X 10.1.8. The isolate ANUK97 was clustered with a representative strain C. theobromicola CBS124945 100% bootstrap support (Fig. 2). For the pathogenicity test, two-month-old cotton seedlings (n = 10) were inoculated with conidial suspensions (10⁶ spore/mL) of C. theobromicola obtained from 7-day-old PDA cultures at 25 °C by spray method. Seedlings treated with sterile distilled water served as controls. Inoculated and control cotton plants were incubated in the greenhouse at 25 °C under a 12-h photoperiod. After 7 days, necrotic lesions were observed on the artificially inoculated cotton plants, while control plants did not develop any disease symptoms. The pathogen was re-isolated from infected cotton leaves, but not from control plants to fulfill Koch’s postulates. To our knowledge, this is the first report of anthracnose of cotton caused by Colletotrichum theobromicola in Korea.


Plant Disease ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yun-fei Mao ◽  
Li Jin ◽  
Huiyue Chen ◽  
Xiang-rong Zheng ◽  
Minjia Wang ◽  
...  

American sweetgum (Liquidambar styraciflua L.) is an important tree for landscaping and wood processing. In recent years, leaf spots on American sweetgum with disease incidence of about 53% were observed in about 1200 full grown plants in a field (about 8 ha) located in Pizhou, Jiangsu Province, China. Initially, dense reddish-brown spots appeared on both old and new leaves. Later, the spots expanded into dark brown lesions with yellow halos. Symptomatic leaf samples from different trees were collected and processed in the laboratory. For pathogen isolation, leaf sections (4×4mm) removed from the lesion margin were surface sterilized with 75% ethanol for 20s and then sterilized in 2% NaOCl for 30s, rinsed three times in sterile distilled water, incubated on potato dextrose agar (PDA) at 25 °C in the darkness. After 5 days of cultivation, the pure culture was obtained by single spore separation. 6 isolate samples from different leaves named FXA1 to FXA6 shared nearly identical morphological features. The isolate FXA1 (codes CFCC 54675) was deposited in the China Center for Type Culture Collection. On the PDA, the colonies were light yellow with dense mycelium, rough margin, and reverse brownish yellow. Conidiophores (23–35 × 6–10 µm) (n=60) were solitary, straight to flexuous. Conidia (19–34 × 10–21 µm) (n=60) were single, muriform, oblong, mid to deep brown, with 1 to 6 transverse septa. These morphological characteristics resemble Stemphylium eturmiunum (Simmons 2001). Genomic DNA was extracted from mycelium following the CTAB method. The ITS region, gapdh, and cmdA genes were amplified and sequenced with the primers ITS5/ITS4 (Woudenberg et al. 2017), gpd1/gpd2 (Berbee et al. 1999), and CALDF1/CALDR2 (Lawrence et al. 2013), respectively. A maximum likelihood phylogenetic analysis based on ITS, gapdh and cmdA (accession nos. MT898502-MT898507, MT902342-MT902347, MT902336-MT902341) sequences using MEGA 7.0 revealed that the isolates were placed in the same clade as S. eturmiunum with 98% bootstrap support. All seedlings for pathogenicity tests were enclosed in plastic transparent incubators to maintain high relative humidity (90%-100%) and incubated in a greenhouse at 25°C with a 12-h photoperiod. For pathogenicity, the conidial suspension (105 spores/ml) of each isolate was sprayed respectively onto healthy leaves of L. styraciflua potted seedlings (2-year-old, 3 replicate plants per isolate). As a control, 3 seedlings were sprayed with sterile distilled water. After 7 days, dense reddish-brown spots were observed on all inoculated leaves. In another set of tests, healthy plants (3 leaves per plant, 3 replicate plants per isolate) were wound-inoculated with mycelial plugs (4×4mm) and inoculated with sterile PDA plugs as a control. After 7 days, brown lesions with light yellow halo were observed on all inoculation sites with the mycelial plugs. Controls remained asymptomatic in the entire experiment. The pathogen was reisolated from symptomatic tissues and identified as S. eturmiunum but was not recovered from the control. The experiment was repeated twice with the similar results, fulfilling Koch’s postulates. S. eturmiunum had been reported on tomato (Andersen et al. 2004), wheat (Poursafar et al. 2016), garlic (L. Fu et al. 2019) but not on woody plant leaves. To our knowledge, this is the first report of S. eturmiunum causing leaf spot on L. styraciflua in the world. This disease poses a potential threat to American sweetgum and wheat in Pizhou.


Plant Disease ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 98 (4) ◽  
pp. 566-566 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. Zheng ◽  
Z.-H. Liu ◽  
S.-S. Tang ◽  
D. Lu ◽  
X.-Y. Huang

Eggplant (Solanum melongena L.) is an important vegetable crop that has significant economic value in northern regions of China, especially in Liaoning Province. In April 2013, a leaf spot was discovered on the eggplant cultivar 706 in ten 1-ha commercial greenhouses in Huludao, Liaoning Province, with 30% of the eggplants infected, resulting in reduced eggplant yield and quality. By July 2013, disease incidence was 35%. Spots were found mainly on the leaves. At the early stage of infection, small, chlorotic spots appeared on leaves and gradually expanded into brown, irregular spots with a diameter of 1 to 7 mm. Dark green mold developed in the spots on both sides of the leaves at high humidity, and the spots led to leaf yellowing and defoliation. Conidiophores in the lesions were straight or slightly flexuous with 1 to 7 septa, brown and smooth, with typical swellings at the junction of septa, and 45 to 670 × 3.0 to 5.3 μm. Conidia were oval or obpyriform with a smooth surface, brown or dark brown, with 0 to 2 septa and 5.5 to 14.8 × 2.5 to 4.0 μm. The pathogen was consistent morphologically with Cladosporium oxysporum (1). To identify the pathogen, leaf pieces (3 to 5 mm2) taken from the edge of lesions so that each leaf section included both infected and healthy leaf tissue, were surface-disinfested in 75% ethanol for 30 s, then transferred to a 0.1% aqueous mercuric chloride solution for 30 to 60 s, and rinsed with sterilized water three times. The sections were cultured on potato dextrose agar (PDA) at 25°C in the dark for 7 days. Three pure cultures were obtained from single spores. The conidia on PDA were oval or obpyriform, and 5.4 to 14.7 × 2.4 to 4.2 μm with 0 to 1 septa, and were smaller than the conidia examined directly from infected eggplant leaves. Two isolates were grown on synthetic nutrient agar (SNA) in slide cultures. The conidiophores on SNA were straight or slightly flexuous with swellings at the junctions of septa. On the grounds of these morphological characteristics, the pathogen was identified as C. oxysporum (1,3). For DNA extraction, cultures were grown in potato dextrose broth and the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region of ribosomal DNA (rNDA) was amplified using primers ITS1 and ITS4 (2). Sequence analysis showed that the ITS sequences of the two isolates were 99% identical to that of C. oxysporum (GenBank Accession No. EF029816). Two isolates were tested for pathogenicity on eggplant using 1 × 107 conidia/ml in sterilized water atomized onto each of six 7-week-old plants of the cultivar Xi'an Green Eggplant. Sterilized water was applied similarly to another six plants as the control treatment. The plants were incubated at 25°C with 85% relative humidity for 8 to 10 days. After 10 days, light brown, irregular spots were found on inoculated leaves, whereas no symptoms were observed on control plants. The pathogen was re-isolated from lesions on inoculated plants but not from control plants. The re-isolates were confirmed to be C. oxysporum based on morphological characteristics. The pathogenicity test was repeated and the same results obtained. Therefore, the pathogen causing leaf spot on eggplant in these greenhouses was identified as C. oxysporum. This is the first report of C. oxysporum causing leaf spot on greenhouse eggplant in China. C. oxysporum is a known pathogen of pepper and tomato. Additional studies are needed to provide management recommendations for this pathogen on Solanaceae crops. References: (1) K. Bensch et al. Stud. Mycol. 67:1, 2010. (2) Q. Li and G. Wang. Microbiol. Res. 164:233, 2009. (3) W. T. H. Peregrine and K. B. Ahmad. Phytopathol. Pap. 27:1, 1982.


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