scholarly journals First Report of Helminthosporium solani Causing Silver Scurf of Potato in Hebei Province, North China

Plant Disease ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 91 (4) ◽  
pp. 460-460 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. M. Tian ◽  
Y. C. Chen ◽  
M. Q. Zou ◽  
Q. Xue

Silver scurf disease of potato (Solanum tuberosum) caused by Helminthosporium solani Durieu & Mont. occurs worldwide. Severe occurrence of the disease, the resulting weight loss of stored potatoes, and lower market classes of potato caused by the fungus have been documented in Europe and North America (1). Tubers infected with the pathogen develop tan-to-gray lesions that have a characteristic silvery appearance when moist. In 2005, gray spots with a defined margin and silvery appearance when seen against light were observed on potato tubers of cv. Weishu No. 1. The silver symptoms were distinguished from those of black rot disease of potato caused by Colletotrichum coccodes. The potato tubers were obtained from Weichang County of Hebei Province, North China. Conidia were scraped from the spots with a sterile scalpel and identified primarily as the fungus H. solani on the basis of morphological characters of the spores. The fungus was isolated, purified, and cultured on potato dextrose agar (PDA) amended with penicillin and streptomycin. To produce conidia, the fungus was incubated on V8 juice medium at 20 ± 2°C for 15 days under near-UV light (360 to 400 nm, 12-h light/dark cycles). The culture colony developed slowly and is gray to brown. Conidia form in whorls on conidiophores that are black, unbranched, irregular, and multiseptate. Conidia are appreciably tapered, straight or slightly curved, brown, thick walled, and have two to eight pseudosepta. The size of the conidia ranged from 14 to 70 μm long and 4 to 9 μm wide. The spore suspension was adjusted to 1.5 × 105 spores per ml by using sterile distilled water containing 0.2% Tween 20. Twenty healthy tubers were washed with distilled water and then inoculated by spraying the spore suspension onto the surface with a hand atomizer, while 10 washed tubers were sprayed with distilled water as controls. Inoculated tubers were kept in containers covered with plastic and placed in an incubation chamber at 20°C for 3 weeks. Gray-to-brown blemishes with a silvery appearance as described above were observed on tubers inoculated with the fungus and the tuber surface areas infected were from 1 to 10%, whereas no infection was visible on tubers inoculated with water. The causal agent was reisolated, cultured, and identified microscopically as H. solani. H. solani has been identified from potato tubers in Yunnan Province, Southwest China (2), but to our knowledge, this is the first report of H. solani causing silver scurf of potato in Hebei Province, North China. References: (1) D. Errampalli et al. Plant Pathol. 50:141, 2001. (2) K. Y. Ryu et al. China Potato. 15:195, 2001.

2004 ◽  
Vol 22 (4) ◽  
pp. 690-695 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marcos G. Cunha ◽  
David M. Rizzo

A new potato tuber disease has been observed in the Tulelake region, California, USA, since 1995, with tuber symptoms suggestive of silver scurf disease (Helminthosporium solani). In this work we isolated, identified and demonstrated the nature of the causal agent of this potato disease in California. In addition, the distribution of H. solani in potato fields and the inoculum potential at harvest time were investigated. Disease progress and H. solani spore populations were also characterised under commercial storage conditions. The main fungal genera associated with potato tubers in storage were Helminthosporium solani, Colletotrichum sp., Fusarium sp., and Rhizoctonia sp. The results of Koch's postulates indicated that H. solani is responsible for the outbreak of silver scurf in the Tulelake region. In a disease survey in three commercial potato fields naturally infested, H. solani infections occurred in all fields. However, the extension of the infections differed significantly between the fields. During potato storage, silver scurf usually increased over time. The percentage of the tuber surface covered by silver scurf varied from 3.5% up to 35.5% during the storage period. The number of H. solani lesions per tuber also progressively increased from 6% up to 35%, six months after storage. H. solani spore populations also increased over time in all studied potato stores; nevertheless, they followed no consistent pattern, exhibiting multiple and variable peaks of increase and reduction during the period of storage.


Plant Disease ◽  
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xue Li ◽  
Jie Li ◽  
Hua Yong Bai ◽  
Kecheng Xu ◽  
Ruiqi Zhang ◽  
...  

Rubber tree (Hevea brasiliensis (Willd. ex Adr. Juss) Müll. Arg.) is used for the extraction of natural rubber and is an economically and socially important estate crop commodity in many Asian countries such as Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand, India, Sri Lanka, China and several countries in Africa (Pu et al, 2007). Xishuangbanna City and Wenshan City are the main rubber cultivation areas in Yunnan Province, China. In November 2012, rubber tree showing typical wilt symptoms (Fig. 1 A) and vascular stains (Fig. 1 B) were found in Mengla County, Xishuangbanna City. This disease was destructive in these trees and plant wilt death rate reached 5%. The diseased wood pieces (0.5cm long) from trunk of rubber was surface disinfected with 75% ethanol for 30s and 0.1% mercuric chloride (HgCl2) for 2min, rinsed three times with sterile distilled water, plated onto malt extract agar medium (MEA), and incubated at 28℃. After 7 days, fungal-like filaments were growing from the diseased trunk. Six cultures from 6 rubber trunk were obtained and incubated on MEA at 28℃, after 7 days to observe the cultural features. The mycelium of each culture was white initially on MEA, and then became dark green. Cylindrical endoconidia apices rounded, non-septate, smooth, single or borne in chains (8.9 to 23.6 × 3.81 to 6.3μm) (Fig. 1 C). Chlamydospores (Fig. 1 D) were abundant, thick walled, smooth, forming singly or in chains (11.1 to 19.2 × 9.4 to 12.0μm). The mould fungus was identifed as Chalaropsis based on morphology (Paulin-Mahady et al. 2002). PCR amplification was carried out for 3 isolates, using rDNA internal transcribed spacer (ITS) primer pairs ITS1F and ITS4 (Thorpe et al. 2005). The nucleotide sequences were deposited in the GenBank data base and used in a Blast search of GenBank. Blast analysis of sequenced isolates XJm8-2-6, XJm8-2 and XJm10-2-6 (accessions KJ511486, KJ511487, KJ511489 respectively) had 99% identity to Ch. thielavioides strains hy (KF356186) and C1630 (AF275491). Thus the pathogen was identified as Ch. thielavioides based on morphological characteristics and rDNA-ITS sequence analysis. Pathogenicity test of the isolate (XJm8-2) was conducted on five 1-year-old rubber seedlings. The soil of 5 rubber seedlings was inoculated by drenching with 40 ml spore suspension (106 spores / ml). Five control seedlings were inoculated with 40 ml of sterile distilled water. All the seedlings were maintained in a controlled greenhouse at 25°C and watered weekly. After inoculated 6 weeks, all the seedlings with spore suspension produced wilt symptoms, as disease progressed, inoculated leaves withered (Fig. 1 E) and vascular stains (Fig. 1 F) by 4 months. While control seedlings inoculated with sterile distilled water remained healthy. The pathogen re-isolated from all inoculated symptomatic trunk was identical to the isolates by morphology and ITS analysis. But no pathogen was isolated from the control seedlings. The pathogenicity assay showed that Ch. thielavioides was pathogenic to rubber trees. Blight caused on rubber tree by Ceratocystis fimbriata previously in Brazil (Valdetaro et al. 2015), and wilt by Ch. thielavioides was not reported. The asexual states of most species in Ceratocystis are “chalara” or “thielaviopsis” (de Beer et al. 2014). To our knowledge, this is the first report of this fungus causing wilt of rubber in China. The spread of this disease may pose a threat to rubber production in China.


Plant Disease ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 91 (3) ◽  
pp. 315-320 ◽  
Author(s):  
Brad Geary ◽  
Dennis A. Johnson ◽  
Philip B. Hamm ◽  
Steve James ◽  
Ken A. Rykbost

The effectiveness of various seed-tuber treatments was evaluated for control of silver scurf on potato (Solanum tuberosum), caused by Helminthosporium solani, at four locations in Washing-ton and Oregon using seed-tubers from the same source. Disease incidence was determined at harvest and following storage, and differed significantly among locations. The highest incidence of disease was observed at Redmond, OR and the lowest was at Hermiston, OR. Significantly less silver scurf occurred on progeny-tubers, regardless of location, when seed was treated with the fungicide treatments fludioxonil, fludioxonil + quintozene, azoxystrobin, or thiophanate-methyl + mancozeb compared with the nontreated control. A sample of H. solani from seed planted in the Columbia Basin of Washington and Oregon was assessed for resistance to thia-bendazole (TBZ) and thiophanate-methyl (TPM). Sensitivity of 20 isolates of H. solani to TBZ was determined on V8 media amended with TBZ. Four isolates, selected as a subset from the 20 isolates tested for TBZ sensitivity, were tested for resistance to TPM, mancozeb, and TPM + mancozeb on amended V8 media. Isolates differed significantly in sensitivity to both chemicals. Thirteen isolates out of the 20 tested were resistant to TBZ. One out of the four subsets of isolates was resistant to both TBZ and TPM. TBZ sensitivity was not related to geographic origin of the isolates. Variation in resistance was evident on a small scale as seen with one resistant and one sensitive isolate collected from the same tuber. This is the first report that silver scurf incidence is affected by location despite the same tuber-seed source and also the first report of TBZ and TPM resistant isolates of H. solani from the Columbia Basin (Oregon and Washington) production area.


2005 ◽  
Vol 82 (2) ◽  
pp. 41-48 ◽  
Author(s):  
V. Hervieux ◽  
R. Chabot ◽  
J. Arul ◽  
R.J. Tweddell

Silver scurf of potatoes (Solanum tuberosum), caused by the fungus Helminthosporium solani, is an important surface-blemishing disease of potato tubers. The objective of the study was to evaluate the efficacy of different fungicides applied to potato seed tubers for control of silver scurf. Field trials were conducted in Québec province in 1998 and 1999. Potato seed tubers infected with H. solani were treated with either talc, fludioxonil, mancozeb, iprodione, thiabendazole, imazalil or azoxystrobin, and planted at three locations in 1998 and two locations in 1999. The results showed that, under our experimental conditions, the fungicides tested, applied as seed treatments, did not significantly influence total and marketable yields as well as silver scurf severity on daughter tubers at harvest and after different storage periods. In addition, this study showed the influence of the experimental locations on silver scurf development and suggests that soil inoculum plays a role in the epidemiology of the disease.


Plant Disease ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shuwu Zhang ◽  
Jinhuan Chen ◽  
Lijun Ma ◽  
Enchen Li ◽  
Baoli Ji ◽  
...  

Wilting of branches and leaves was observed on 4-5 year old apple trees of the varieties Delicious and Fuji in orchards located in Wushan, Gansu Province, China in April 2018. Subsequently, the stem vascular tissue and woody xylem became discolored and necrotic. The stem dieback expanded rapidly to the entire vasculature of the branches. Finally, the epidermis of the stem bases split and was covered with light pink mold. For the pathogen isolation, 25 symptomatic stems were collected from 25 symptomatic trees in 3 individual orchards. Fragments (approximately 0.5 cm in length × 0.5 cm in width) of symptomatic stems were surface sterilized and individually transferred to Petri dishes containing potato dextrose agar (PDA), and incubated for 4 days at 25°C. Five types of isolates with distinct morphological characteristics (PJ1 to PJ5) were obtained from the 25 symptomatic stems after the single spore inoculation and sub-culture. The isolation frequency of PJ1, PJ2, PJ3, PJ4 and PJ5 types was 11%, 8%, 100%, 4% and 13%, respectively, in the 25 symptomatic stems. A spore suspension of PJ1, PJ2, PJ3, PJ4 and PJ5 types was prepared by adding 5 ml of sterile distilled water in the 14-day old culture colonies and filtered through 0.22 mm Millipore membranes, and the final concentration was adjusted to 108 per ml for inoculation. Detached healthy apple stems (15 cm in length) were surface-disinfested and used to evaluate the pathogenicity of PJ1 (7 isolates), PJ2 (5 isolates), PJ3 (32 isolates), PJ4 (2 isolates) and PJ5 (9 isolates) by dipping the stems into sterilised tubs containing the spore suspension (108 per ml) of each isolate. Apple stems dipped in sterile distilled water served as the control. Each control and treatment were repeated 3 times. At day 15 and 35, the stems infected with the spore suspension of PJ3 isolates developed symptoms that were similar to those observed in the apple orchards. However, the other four types (PJ1, PJ2, PJ4 and PJ5) exhibited either no symptoms or different symptoms from those observed in the apple orchards. There were no symptoms on the control stems. After the colony of the pathogen (PJ3 type) was re-isolated from the infected stem bases 35 days inoculation. The PJ3 type isolates with same morphological characteristics as the original PJ3 type isolates were used for further examination and identification. After 4 days of incubation on PDA, the colonies of PJ3 type isolates developed velvety aerial mycelia with white or light pink color when they were viewed from the front/top side of the PDA and orange-red color when they were viewed from the reverse/bottom side. After 14 days of incubation, the color in the centre of the colonies changed to yellow green in the front view and carmine red in the reverse view of the plates. Three types of spores (microconidia, macroconidia and chlamydospores) were observed after incubation of PJ3 type isolates for 14 days. The size (width and length) of 30 conidia in each of PJ3 type isolates was measured and averaged. The microconidia were abundant on aerial mycelia and limoniform, oval or pyriform with 0-1 septa. Their size ranged from 1.94 μm to 8.05 μm in length and 1.48 μm to 3.62 μm in width. The macroconidia were falciform and curved in shape, mostly with 3-5 septa and a size ranging from 13.52 μm to 22.43 μm in length and 2.31 μm to 3.87 μm in width. The chlamydospores were spherical, intercalary and formed in chains on PDA plates. These morphological characteristics indicate that the PJ3 type isolates could be Fusarium tricinctum (Chen et al. 2019; Aktaruzzaman et al. 2018). To confirm the morphological identification, the sequences of internal transcribed spacer (ITS), transcriptional enhancer factor-1 (TEF-lα) and ribosomal RNA large subunit gene (LSU) of the representative isolate PJ3-3 selected from the PJ3 type isolates with same morphological characteristics were sequenced and used for molecular identification (Laurence et al. 2011; Abd-Elsalam et al. 2003; Miller et al. 1996). The sequences of ITS, TEF-lα and LSU of the PJ3-3 isolate were deposited in NCBI database with the accession numbers of MZ799356, MZ820045 and MZ820044, respectively. In BLAST analyses, the obtained sequences of the PJ3-3 isolate showed 99.47%, 100% and 99.01% identity to the corresponding region of F. tricinctum ITS (JX179207.1: 3-566 Fusarium tricinctum isolate Fyx 1), TEF-lα (MK032320.1 F. tricinctum isolate ZD3) and LSU (KC311496.1 Fusarium tricinctum isolate L12), respectively. The phylogenetic analysis clustered the PJ3-3 isolate sequences within the same clade with ITS, TEF-lα and LSU sequences of F. tricinctum isolates. Thus, the PJ3-3 isolate was identified as F. tricinctum based on the pathogenicity tests, morphological characteristics and molecular analyses. Previously, the symptoms of xylem browning and dieback were observed in the twigs of wild apple trees that were collected from wild apple forests, and the species F. avenaceum, F. solani, F. tricinctum, F. proliferatum, and F. sporotrichioides were isolated from diseased wild apple trees (Chen et al. 2019). Only F. avenaceum, F. solani, F. proliferatum, and F. sporotrichioides were reported as the pathogens causing the disease symptoms of xylem browning and dieback in wild apple trees in Xinjiang, China (Chen et al. 2019). In our present study, we found that F. tricinctum can cause stem vascular and woody xylem browning, wilting, and dieback in the apple tree varieties Delicious and Fuji. These are new symptoms discovered in our present research and different from the previous paper (Chen et al. 2019). Therefore, to our knowledge, this study is the first report of F. tricinctum causing a new disease on apple trees in China following Koch’s postulates. Our findings are important for the management of apple disease and protect apple trees in the future.


Plant Disease ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 97 (6) ◽  
pp. 838-838 ◽  
Author(s):  
V. Gupta ◽  
V. K. Razdan ◽  
D. John ◽  
B. C. Sharma

In India, rice (Oryza sativa L.) plays a major role in national food security, with total production of 102.75 million t, harvested from 44 million ha during 2011 (1). Weeds are one of the major causes of losses in rice. Cyperus iria, locally known as chatriwala dela (rice flat sedge), is an annual weed in the Cyperaceae that can reach 50 to 60 cm tall. A leaf blight of C. iria was observed during August 2010 in a 20-ha rice field (cv. Basmati 370) at the University Research Farm, Chatha, Jammu (32° 43′ N, 74° 54′ E). Symptomatic plants were scattered randomly in the field and had water-soaked spots on the upper leaf surfaces initially, which turned brown after 4 days and developed a yellow halo, resulting in a blighted appearance. The diseased leaves shriveled and infected plants died. Infected C. iria leaf pieces with adjacent healthy tissue were collected, surface-sterilized in 0.1% mercuric chloride for 20 s, then rinsed three times in sterilized distilled water. The pieces were plated onto potato dextrose agar (PDA) and incubated at 27 ± 1°C for 4 days. A pure fungal culture was obtained by single-spore technique on 2% water agar and maintained on PDA at 10°C. The fungus initially produced white mycelium that became brown with age. Dark brown spots or flecks of pigment formed in the agar. Macroconidia were long and slender, with tapered apical cells that were elongated or even whip-like. Basal cells of macroconidia were prominent, foot shaped, and elongated. Macroconidia were 39.55 to 56.74 × 3.75 to 4.5 μm with 3 to 5 septa. Conidiophores were compact, penicillately branched, and arose from lateral branches which initially were one-celled and bore 2 to 4 phialides at the apex. Chlamydospores were intercalary, solitary, in chains or in knots, globose, and 7 to 9 μm in diameter. On the basis of morphological characteristics (2), the fungus was identified as Fusarium equiseti (Corda) Sacc. and deposited in the Indian Type Culture Collection, New Delhi (8424.11). The ITS (internal transcribed spacer) region of rDNA was amplified by PCR with primers ITS1/ITS2 and sequenced. BLASTn analysis of the sequence showed 100% homology with the ITS sequence of F. equiseti in the NCBI database (JN596252.1), and the sequence was deposited in GenBank (KC434458). To confirm pathogenicity of the F. equiseti isolate, 10 seeds of C. iria were planted in five clay pots (each 38 cm in diameter) filled with sterilized soil. Three seedlings were used for the experiment and the remaining seedlings removed from each pot. A total of 15 seedlings (5 pots × 3 seedlings per pot) at the two-leaf stage were spray-inoculated with a 50-ml conidial suspension of the isolate (105 cfu/ml) using a hand atomizer. The control treatment included three seedlings treated similarly with sterile distilled water. The spore suspension was prepared in potato dextrose broth using a culture of the fungus incubated for 10 days and then homogenized at 140 rpm. Tween 20 (1%) was added to the spore suspension. Small spots developed 4 days after inoculation, and the lesions then coalesced into large necrotic areas, resulting in leaf blight 10 days after inoculation. F. equiseti was reisolated from inoculated leaves using the method described above, whereas no fungus was reisolated from control plants, fulfilling Koch's postulates. The isolated fungus displayed the same morphological and cultural features as the original isolate. F. equiseti has been reported to infect Echinochloa spp. in Iran (3), but to our knowledge, this is the first report of F. equiseti infecting C. iria in India. Thus, F. equiseti represents a potential biocontrol agent for managing C. iria in rice fields. References: (1) Anonymous. Direct. Rice Res. Newslett. 10:2, 2012. (2) C. Booth. The Genus Fusarium. Commonwealth Mycological Institute, Kew, Surrey, England, p. 157, 1971. (3) M. R. S. Motlagh. Austral. J. Crop Sci. 4:457, 2010.


Author(s):  
M. B. Ellis

Abstract A description is provided for Helminthosporium solani. Information is included on the disease caused by the organism, its transmission, geographical distribution, and hosts. HOSTS: Solanum tuberosum. DISEASE: Silver scurf of potato tubers. It causes a blemish of the skin which becomes discoloured brown or silvery in patches, more conspicuous in spring especially on greened tubers. The silvery appearance is most apparent when tubers are washed. Sometimes the affected areas become dry and flake-off. Where infection is severe under storage conditions the entire surface of the tuber may become sooty owing to the presence of large numbers of conidiophores and conidia. GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION: CMI Map 233 shows distribution up to 1951. Countries from which the disease has been reported since then include: Greece, India, Jersey, Mozambique, Peru, Switzerland, U.S.S.R., Venezuela. TRANSMISSION: Through infected seed tubers.


Plant Disease ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jiang-kuan Cui ◽  
Haohao Ren ◽  
Kunyuan Chen ◽  
Bo Zhou ◽  
Deliang Peng ◽  
...  

Three of the cereal cyst nematodes, Heterodera avenae, H. filipjevi and H. latipons are considered to be the most economically important cyst nematodes that affect cultivated cereals around the world. H. filipjevi was first detected in China from Xuchang, Henan Province in 2010 (Peng et al. 2010) and now has been recorded in the Central China of Henan, Shandong and Anhui provinces and the Northwest China of Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region (Cui et al. 2020). In June 2019, 42 samples consisting of roots and soil were collected from winter wheat fields in Hebei Province of North China. Cysts were detected in 37 soil samples with a mean of 6.4 ± 1.67 cysts per 100 ml of soil. Cysts and second-stage juveniles (J2s) were extracted from root and soil following Cobb's sieving gravity method. Morphological and molecular studies of J2s and cysts confirmed its identity with H. filipjevi in 5 samples from Handan (N36°10'052" and E114°35'056"; N36°37'054" and E114°22'052"), Xingtai (N36°53'060" and E114°30'011") and Shijiazhuang (N 37°26'048" and E 116°05'039") in Hebei Province, China. Morphologically, the cysts are lemon-shaped, light or dark brown in color. The vulval cone is bifenestrate with horseshoe-shaped semifenestrae, strongly globular bullae, and well-developed underbridge. Measurements (mean +_ sd (range)) of cysts (n=10), body length not including neck is 743.0 ± 36.1 μm (665 - 780 μm), body width is 559.0 ± 50.0 μm (455 - 639 μm), length / width ratio is 1.33 ± 0.07 (1.20 - 1.46); neck length is 99.3 ± 8.8 μm (85 - 122 μm); fenestrae length is 56.8 ± 5.0 μm (49 - 65 μm) and width is 25.5 ± 1.8 μm (21.1 - 27.8 μm); underbridge length is 84.0 ± 8.1 μm (62 - 93 μm); and vulval slit length is 8.6 ± 0.5 μm (7.2 - 9.1 μm). Measurements of J2s (n = 12), body length is 541 ± 11.4 μm (490 - 578 μm); stylet length is 22.3 ± 0.5 μm (22.0 - 25.0 μm) with anchor-shaped basal knobs; tail length is 57.7 ± 3.7 μm (52.7 - 65.2 μm), and hyaline tail terminal length is 36.5 ± 2.8 μm (32 - 39.8 μm). The tail had a sharp terminus. Morphology of the cysts and J2s were consistent with the record of H. filipjevi (Peng et al. 2010; Subbotin et al. 2010). The amplifications of rDNA-internal transcribed spacer (ITS) fragments were generated with a PCR fragment of 1054 bp from single cysts of each population, using primers TW81 and AB28 (Joyce et al. 1994). The PCR tests for each sample were repeated five times. The PCR product was purified and sequenced. All nucleotide sequences of ITS-rDNA were submitted to GenBank under accession numbers MW282843-6. Sequences from the ITS region were more than 99.5% identical to those of H. filipjevi from Egypt (KF225725), Turkey (KR704308, KR704293 and MN848333) and China (KT314234, MT254744 and KY448473). These results from ITS supported its identity as H. filipjevi. The results were also confirmed by species specific sequence characterized amplified region primers of H. filipjevi (Peng et al. 2013). Pathogenicity of the H. filipjevi was confirmed by infection of winter wheat (Triticum aestivum L cv. ‘Aikang58’) and examination of the nematode development and reproduction. Wheat seeds were germinated in petri dishes and then transplanted into five polyvinyl chloride tubs (3 cm in diameter, 25 cm in length) that contained 150 cm3 of a sterile soil mixture (loamy soil: sand = 1:1), each with 5 cysts (mean of 252.0 eggs/cyst). Plants were grown in an artificial climate box for one week at 14/18°C, two weeks at 16/20°C, five weeks at 18/25°C and two weeks at 22/30°C, under 8 h of darkness/16 h light and normal culturing practices (Cui et al. 2015). The parasitic J2s, third and fourth-stage juveniles, and adult females were observed in roots stained with acid fuchsin at 10, 20, 30, and 50 days after inoculation (DAI), and an average of 32.0 cysts per tubes were extracted 70 DAI. The new cyst’ morphological and molecular characteristics were identical to the H. filipjevi cysts from the original soil samples. Three other tubes without cysts were set as control and there were no newly formed cysts. Heterodera avenae and H. filipjevi had been detected in a total of 16 wheat-producing provinces in China, which resulted in losses of 1.9 billion CNY year-1 (Cui et al. 2015). To our knowledge, this is the first report of H. filipjevi in Hebei Province of North China. Cereal cyst nematodes are easily transferred to non-infested areas by many avenues, resulting in increased species and pathotype complexity (Cui et al. 2020). Once H. filipjevi continues to spread in main wheat producing area of China, it could become be a new threat to cereals production. It is time to take effective control methods to prevent H. filipjevi further dispersal, especially through the farming machinery transmission. Hebei Province is one of the most important major grain-producing areas, our findings will be very beneficial for H. filipjevi management and further research on winter wheat in Hebei Province, North China.


Plant Disease ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 98 (7) ◽  
pp. 993-993 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. A. Samac ◽  
J. Willbur ◽  
L. Behnken ◽  
F. Brietenbach ◽  
G. Blonde ◽  
...  

Stemphylium leaf spot occurs in most areas where alfalfa (Medicago sativa) is grown. In the United States, Stemphylium botryosum is reported to be the predominant pathogen (1), although S. vesicarium and S. herbarum are also observed. S. alfalfae was isolated on alfalfa in Australia (4) and S. globuliferum was reported in Egypt and Korea. In April and May 2012, alfalfa plants with leaf spot symptoms were observed in Rosemount and Waseca, MN, and in Arlington, Tomah, and Waupaca, WI. Initial symptoms consisted of white to tan spots with a brown border, 2 to 3 mm in diameter, circular to oval, enlarging to 5 to 8 mm in diameter. Large lesions often coalesced. Small, narrow, brown lesions occurred on petioles. Lower killed leaves remained attached to the primary stem. Spots were larger than those caused by the cool temperature biotype of S. botryosum. Conidia formed on lesions after 48 h in a moist chamber. Conidia were removed with a fine glass rod, germinated on 1% water agar, and single hyphae transferred to V8 agar (V8A). After 2 weeks under room light, plates were placed under UV light to stimulate spore production. Conidia on host material were borne singly on straight, unbranched, smooth conidiophores, medium brown at the apex. Conidia were medium to dark brown with small papillae, subspherical with 3 to 4 transverse and 3 to 4 complete or near complete longitudinal septa, with a distinct constriction at the median transverse septum. Conidia were 27.5 to 32.5 μm long × 20 to 22.5 μm wide with a length/width (L/W) ratio of 1.2 to 1.5. Conidia on V8A were smaller, 25 to 30 μm long × 12.5 to 19 μm wide with a L/W of 1.6 to 1.8. Ascostromata 300 μm in diameter formed on leaves held at 4°C for 2 months as well as on culture plates after 1 month. Ascospores from leaves were golden brown to reddish, 40 to 42.5 × 20 μm, slightly broader in the upper half of the spore, with 7 to 8 transverse septa and one complete longitudinal septum with several incomplete septa. Ascospores from culture were smaller, 27.5 to 30 × 12.5 to 15 μm wide. These morphological features are consistent with the description for S. globuliferum (3). DNA was extracted from pure cultures of SAr301 and SWp202, isolated from plants grown in Arlington and Waupaca, respectively, and used to amplify ITS1-5.8S-ITS2 rDNA using primers ITS1 and ITS4, GPD with primers GPD1 and GPD2, EF-1α with EF446f and EF1473R, and the intergenic spacer between vmaA and vpsA with primers ATPF2 and GTP604R (2). In sequence comparisons made by BLASTn searches of GenBank, the ITS (KF479193), GPD (KF479194), and EF-1α (KF479195) sequences from S. globuliferum were different from the gene sequences of S. botryosum but identical to those from S. vesicarium, S. herbarum, and S. alfalfae. The vmaA-vpsA spacer sequence (KF479196) of S. globuliferum had 3 nucleotide differences from S. vesicarium and S. herbarum and 4 nucleotide differences from S. alfalfae, demonstrating that this sequence is useful for species discrimination. Conidia from strains SAr301 and SWp 202 were suspended at 104/ml in sterile water with 0.01% Tween 20 and used to inoculate 12 alfalfa plants using a handheld sprayer. Plants were kept at 100% RH for 48 h, then grown at 20°C with a 16-h photoperiod. After 2 weeks, lesions similar to those seen in the field were observed on leaves of all plants. Symptomatic leaves placed in moist chambers produced conidia with the size and morphology of S. globuliferum within 48 h. This is the first report to our knowledge of S. globuliferum causing disease on alfalfa in the United States. Cultures were deposited in the University of Minnesota Mycological Culture Collection. References: (1) W. A. Cowling et al. Phytopathology 71:679, 1981. (2) P. Inderbitzin et al. Mycologia 101:320, 2009. (3) E. G. Simmons. Mycologia 61:1, 1969. (4) E. G. Simmons. Sydowia 38:284, 1985.


Plant Disease ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 91 (9) ◽  
pp. 1199-1199 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y. Ko ◽  
K. S. Yao ◽  
C. Y. Chen ◽  
C. H. Lin

A disease of sponge gourd (Luffa cylindrica (L.) Roem., family Cucurbitaceae) has become a serious threat to sponge gourd production since 2003 in central Taiwan. Initially, symptoms appear as small, brown spots on the flower petals that spread to the entire flower and cause blossom blight within 2 to 3 days. Subsequently, the pathogen develops abundant mycelium and moves from the petals onto the fruits causing blossom end rot and fruit stem rot. Severely infected fruits become completely rotten and desiccate. Tissues were excised from diseased sponge gourd fruits (sampled from Fongyuan, located at 24.25°N, 120.72°E in Taichung County), immersed in a solution containing 3% sodium hypochlorite and 70% ethanol for 1 min, washed three times with sterile water, and then cultured on potato dextrose agar (PDA) medium. A fungus, identified as Botrytis cinerea, produced abundant mycelium on PDA medium when incubated under constant fluorescent light 185 ± 35 μE·m–2·s–1 at 24°C. The conidia were smooth, hyaline, and globoid or slightly ellipsoid. The conidia measured 9.5 to 19.3 μm (average 13.8 μm) long and 6.0 to 17.8 μm (average 10.1 μm) wide, dimensions that are similar to the descriptions of B. cinerea (11 × 11 to 15 μm) that causes gray mold of strawberry (2). The identity of B. cinerea was also confirmed by the production of numerous black sclerotia on PDA plates incubated either in the dark or under light at 20 to 24°C for 9 to 10 days. Koch's postulates were fulfilled by using 3-day-old mycelial agar discs of the fungus or a spore suspension containing 105 conidia per milliliter of distilled water as inoculum. Shallow (2 × 2 × 2 mm) incisions were made on fresh sponge gourd fruits with a sterile scalpel and inoculated with either a 5-mm mycelial disc or 0.5 ml of the spore suspension. Inoculated areas were covered with moist sterile cotton, and the fruits were enclosed in a plastic bag and incubated at 20 to 24°C for 3 days. Wounded fruits inoculated with PDA discs or sterile distilled water alone served as controls. Pathogenicity tests were performed three times using five fruits in each trial. Symptoms and signs of the disease similar to those described above were observed in all (100%) the inoculated fruits, while no symptoms developed in the control fruits. Reisolation from the inoculated fruits consistently yielded B. cinerea. Reciprocal inoculations on sponge gourd, guava, and strawberry with mycelial discs or spore suspensions of a B. cinerea isolate obtained from sponge gourd, guava, and strawberry showed cross pathogenicity among isolates and hosts. Important groups of plants that are attacked by B. cinerea are vegetables, small berry fruits, ornamentals, and bulbs (1). Though 80 species of host plants, mostly shrubs and nursery plants, were reported to be the host of B. cinerea in Taiwan (3), to our knowledge, this is the first report of gray mold disease affecting sponge gourd in Taiwan. References: (1) G. N. Agrios. Plant Pathology. Academic Press. San Diego, 2005. (2) J. L. Mass, ed. Page 56 in: Compendium of Strawberry Diseases. The American Phytopathological Society. St. Paul, MN, 1984. (3). Y. Ko et al. Plant Prot. Bull. (Taiwan) 37:439, 1995.


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