scholarly journals Alternaria alternata Causing Flower Stem Blight of Lupinus havardii

Plant Disease ◽  
2001 ◽  
Vol 85 (2) ◽  
pp. 231-231
Author(s):  
P. F. Colbaugh ◽  
W. A. Mackay ◽  
T. D. Davis

Lupinus havardii Wats., commonly known as Big Bend or Chisos bluebonnet, is a showy winter annual that can reach 1.0 to 1.5 m in height and produces blue, fragrant inflorescence (racemes). L. havardii is native to a narrow geographic range along the Mexican border in southwest Texas. The inflorescence of L. havardii has considerable potential in the cut flower industry where there is a need for high-quality, durable flowers with a blue color (1). Several crops have been produced in the greenhouse to determine production and post-harvest characteristics of the cut inflorescence. Under greenhouse growing conditions during March through June 1999, numerous plants of L. havardii cv. Texas Sapphire grown in raised beds and in containers in both Dallas and El Paso, TX, were observed with blighted flower racemes with light brown to gray lesions ranging from 1 to 5 cm in length. The racemes were attacked at varying ages and eventually assumed a hooked appearance where the terminal 15 cm of the raceme was bent downward. Isolations from symptomatic lesions removed from L. havardii flower stalks consistently yielded cultures of an Alternaria sp. on potato-dextrose agar. Typical conidia measured 27 μm length and 11 μm width with 3 to 5 transverse septa. The fungus was identified as A. alternata (Fries) Keissler consistent with the description in Ellis (2). Pathogenicity tests were conducted in the laboratory by inoculating cut inflorescences with agar disks containing the fungus. Inoculations produced light brown lesions on the racemes that were typical of disease symptoms observed on greenhouse crops. In addition to the blue-flowered Texas Sapphire cultivar, we also observed the disease symptoms on pink and white flowered breeding lines of L. havardii. This disease is important as a flower stem blighting pathogen and could severely restrict production of cut flowers during the growing season. This is the first report of Alternaria sp. attacking L. havardii. References: (1) T. D. Davis. HortScience 29:1110, 1994. (2) M. B. Ellis. 1971. Dematiaceous Hyphomycetes. Commonwealth Mycological Institute Kew, England.

Plant Disease ◽  
2001 ◽  
Vol 85 (2) ◽  
pp. 228-228 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. F. Colbaugh ◽  
W. A. Mackay ◽  
S. George

Zinnia acerosa (D.C.) Gray, is a Southwest native flowering plant frequently observed in the Trans-Pecos desert and desert grasslands of Arizona, Texas, and New Mexico. The plant is valued for producing an abundance of distinctive 2.0 cm diameter white flowers on greenish and sparsely leaved stems. Selections of Z. acerosa from West Texas are under evaluation as a water conserving plant species for use in arid landscapes of the Southwest. During April through June, Z. acerosa plants in TAMU, Dallas field plots were observed with small, brown flower spots that enlarged to include whole petals, causing conspicuous flower blighting. Microscopic examination of lesions from infected flower blossoms demonstrated the presence of short beaked, cylindrical spores near the smaller lesions on flower petals. Isolations from symptomatic flower petals consistently yielded cultures of an Alternaria sp. with long chains of conidia. Typical conidia contained 3 to 5 transverse walls and 1 to 2 longitudinal walls and measured 43 μm length by 15 μm width. The fungus was identified as A. alternata (Fries) Keissler consistent with the description in Ellis (1). Pathogenicity tests were conducted on plants maintained on a greenhouse bench by spraying spore suspensions obtained from 16-day-old A. alternata cultures on potato-dextrose agar. Inoculations produced light brown lesions on blossoms typical of field disease symptoms of the disease. This disease is important as a flower blight, however, infections on the leaves are also apparent but limited. Outbreaks of the disease are frequently observed during periods of rainfall during the summer months. This is the first report of Alternaria alternata causing a floral blight on Z. acerosa. References: (1) M. B. Ellis. 1971. Dematiaceous Hyphomycetes. Commonwealth Mycological Institute, Kew, Surrey, England.


2010 ◽  
Vol 100 (12) ◽  
pp. 1340-1351 ◽  
Author(s):  
Juan Moral ◽  
Concepción Muñoz-Díez ◽  
Nazaret González ◽  
Antonio Trapero ◽  
Themis J. Michailides

Species in the family Botryosphaeriaceae are common pathogens causing fruit rot and dieback of many woody plants. In this study, 150 Botryosphaeriaceae isolates were collected from olive and other hosts in Spain and California. Representative isolates of each type were characterized based on morphological features and comparisons of DNA sequence data of three regions: internal transcribed spacer 5.8S, β-tubulin, and elongation factor. Three main species were identified as Neofusicoccum mediterraneum, causing dieback of branches of olive and pistachio; Diplodia seriata, causing decay of ripe fruit and dieback of olive branches; and Botryosphaeria dothidea, causing dalmatian disease on unripe olive fruit in Spain. Moreover, the sexual stage of this last species was also found attacking olive branches in California. In pathogenicity tests using unripe fruit and branches of olive, D. seriata isolates were the least aggressive on the fruit and branches while N. mediterraneum isolates were the most aggressive on both tissues. Isolates of B. dothidea which cause dalmatian disease on fruit were not pathogenic on branches and only weakly aggressive on fruit. These results, together with the close association between the presence of dalmatian disease symptoms and the wound created by the olive fly (Bactrocera oleae), suggest that the fly is essential for the initiation of the disease on fruit. Isolates recovered from dalmatian disease symptoms had an optimum of 26°C for mycelial growth and 30°C for conidial germination, suggesting that the pathogen is well adapted to high summer temperatures. In contrast, the range of water activity in the medium for growth of dalmatian isolates was 0.93 to 1 MPa, which was similar to that for the majority of fungi. This study resolved long-standing questions of identity and pathogenicity of species within the family Botryosphaeriaceae attacking olive trees in Spain and California.


Plant Disease ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 103 (6) ◽  
pp. 1337-1346 ◽  
Author(s):  
Catalina Salgado-Salazar ◽  
Nina Shiskoff ◽  
Nicholas LeBlanc ◽  
Adnan A. Ismaiel ◽  
Maxton Collins ◽  
...  

Woody plants of the Buxaceae, including species of Buxus, Pachysandra, and Sarcococca, are widely grown evergreen shrubs and groundcovers. Severe leaf spot symptoms were observed on S. hookeriana at the U.S. National Arboretum in Washington, DC, in 2016. Affected plants were growing adjacent to P. terminalis exhibiting Volutella blight symptoms. Fungi isolated from both hosts were identical based on morphology and multilocus phylogenetic analysis and were identified as Coccinonectria pachysandricola (Nectriaceae, Hypocreales), causal agent of Volutella blight of Pachysandra species. Pathogenicity tests established that Co. pachysandricola isolated from both hosts caused disease symptoms on P. terminalis and S. hookeriana, but not on B. sempervirens. Artificial inoculations with Pseudonectria foliicola, causal agent of Volutella blight of B. sempervirens, did not result in disease on P. terminalis or S. hookeriana. Wounding enhanced infection by Co. pachysandricola and Ps. foliicola on all hosts tested but was not required for disease development. Genome assemblies were generated for the Buxaceae pathogens that cause Volutella diseases: Co. pachysandricola, Ps. buxi, and Ps. foliicola; these ranged in size from 25.7 to 28.5 Mb. To our knowledge, this foliar blight of S. hookeriana represents a new disease for this host and is capable of causing considerable damage to infected plants.


2020 ◽  
pp. 126-129
Author(s):  
O. A. Shchuklina ◽  
I. N. Voronchikhina ◽  
A. D. Alenicheva ◽  
I. N. Klimenkova ◽  
V. V. Voronchikhin ◽  
...  

Relevance. The specifics of the fresh cut flowers market in the Russian Federation is such, that 85-100% of the total volume of flowers sold is imported. The most popular flowers among Russian consumers are roses (up to 60% in the total share of fresh flowers), chrysanthemums and carnations, all of which require certain growing conditions. Recently, the market of local seasonal flowers has begun to develop, the main players in which are small farms or household plots. Material and methods. This article presents the data about market analysis of fresh cut flowers in Russia for the last five years (2015-2020). For this analysis were used the methods applied in economics. The main information database of this research includes data from official state statistics; open data from analytical centers; federal and regional regulations; data from the Federal agency for technical regulation and Metrology; reference materials of specialized data on research field; data from industry-specific portals; sites; articles and reviews written by producers of fresh cut flowers in Russia and worldwide. Results. Russia is one of the top six importers of fresh cut flowers in the world. The most popular flower among Russian consumers is a rose. There is not much suitable soil and climatic conditions in Russia for growing it on a commercial scale in the open ground. In 2018-2019 according to Rosstat data the number of flowers, grown for cutting in Russia, was estimated 263,3 billion pieces. However, now Russian flower producers are not able to meet domestic demand for fresh flowers, so there is no almost export.


Diversity ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (11) ◽  
pp. 218 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jessica Sánchez ◽  
Paola Iturralde ◽  
Alma Koch ◽  
Cristina Tello ◽  
Dennis Martinez ◽  
...  

Andean blackberry (Rubus glaucus Benth) plants from the provinces of Tungurahua and Bolivar (Ecuador) started showing symptoms of black foot disease since 2010. Wilted plants were sampled in both provinces from 2014 to 2017, and fungal isolates were obtained from tissues surrounding necrotic lesions in the cortex of the roots and crown. Based on morphological characteristics and DNA sequencing of histone 3 and the translation elongation factor 1α gene, isolates were identified as one of seven species, Ilyonectria vredehoekensis, Ilyonectria robusta, Ilyonectria venezuelensis, Ilyonectria europaea, Dactylonectria torresensis, or Dactylonectria novozelandica. Pathogenicity tests with isolates from each species, excluding I. europaea and D. novozelandica whose isolates were lost due to contamination, confirmed that the four species tested can produce black foot disease symptoms in Andean blackberry. This is the first report of Dactylonectria and Ilyonectria species causing black foot disease of Andean blackberry.


Author(s):  
Algė Leistrumaitė ◽  
Vanda Paplauskienė ◽  
Audronė Mašauskienė

Evaluation and Use of Genetic Resources in Spring Malting Barley Breeding in Lithuania During the period 2004-2006, grain yield stability and malt quality characteristics of 47 spring barley varieties and 55 promising breeding lines from the collection of spring barley genetic resources were investigated at the Lithuanian Institute of Agriculture (LIA). The growing conditions in 2004 were fairly normal compared with the long-term mean, and the years 2005 and 2006 were rather dry. The varieties and breeding lines tested showed from medium to high variation of grain > 2.5 mm yield (CV 11.5-34.3%) and medium variation of grain yield (CV 4.39-13.33%). However, high temperatures and drought in June of 2006 caused a low grain > 2.5 mm yield (by on average 55.0-67.8%). Promising breeding lines were characterised as having higher grain yield and extract output per ha compared with barley varieties. However, the data showed that grain grading 2.5 mm should be improved for the breeding lines. Using the software STABLE we estimated the stability of malting barley quality traits in relation to weather conditions during the crop year, genotype properties for varieties and breeding lines, as well as the interactions of variety and weather conditions. The selection of lines promising in terms of grain yield, > 2.5 mm grain yield and extract yield, was based on their ability to realise the genetic potential in various growing conditions. The highest score in integral assessment of grain yield, grain > 2.5 mm yield and extract yield was identified for the varieties Tocada', Sebastian', Scarlett' and breeding lines: 7939-1, 7661-1, and 8080-4. The varieties and breeding lines that exhibited high grain stability, high grain quality and other agronomic traits were utilised in further breeding programmes.


2021 ◽  
Vol 910 (1) ◽  
pp. 012068
Author(s):  
Mateen Yilmaz I. Al-Bayati ◽  
Ziyad Khalaf Salih

Abstract The experiment was carried out in the greenhouse of the Agricultural Research and Experiment Station - Kirkuk University - College of Agriculture for the agricultural season 2020-2021. The experiment was started on 20-11-2020. Carnations were taken from the mothers before the start of the experiment and planted in culture dishes to complete the rooting process. Carnations were planted on terraces with a length of (20 m) and width (75 cm), and the distance between one line and another (30 cm) and between one plant another (30 cm) as well. Artificial lighting (white LED light factor, 40 watts) was used for four hours in addition to the natural light which started half hour before sunset. The intensity of lighting was measured by a light meter (Lux 6612). As for the mulching factor, the industrial mulching was used with white polyethylene and the natural mulching with shredded yellow corn residue with a thickness of 2.5 cm, in addition to the control treatment. The experiment was carried out in a split-plot system in a randomized complete block design (RCBD) and the treatment of illumination was placed in the main plots, while mulching was placed in the secondary plots, and the results were tested according to Duncan’s multiple range test at a probability level of 5%. The following characteristics were studied: plant height (cm), plant total chlorophyll content (CCI), number of days required for flowering (day), number of flower/m2, and flower stem length (cm). The results showed the superiority of lighting and mulching treatment in all vegetative and flowering traits under study.


HortScience ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 39 (4) ◽  
pp. 760B-760
Author(s):  
Wenting He ◽  
Weiming Guo ◽  
Zhongchun Jiang*

Effects of two pretreatments, i.e., ultrasonic wave (UW) and ultrasonic wave plus preservative solution (UW+PS), on water conditions of flower stem and membrane stability of petals in Nymphaea tetragona during 6-d cold wet storage. Compared with no pretreatment control, the two pretreatments prolonged the vase life and improved water conditions of the cut flower during cold storage to different degrees. Fresh weight of flower stems and relative water content of petals increased during cold storage. The water utilization efficiency of flower stem and water potential in different parts of flower stem were improved significantly as a result of the pretreatments. Although both pretreatments helped the cut flowers maintain favorable water relations, the effects of UW + PS combined pretreatment were better than UW pretreatment alone. In addition, UW and UW+PS inhibited the increase in the contents of lipid peroxidation product malondialdehyde (MDA) and superoxide anion in petals. UW + PS promoted superoxide dismutase (SOD) and catalase (CAT) activities in petals during cold storage to a greater degree than did UW.


Plant Disease ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dongli Liu ◽  
Jing Li ◽  
Saisai Zhang ◽  
Xiangjing Wang ◽  
Wensheng Xiang ◽  
...  

Orychophragmus violaceus (L.) O. E. Schulz, also called February orchid or Chinese violet cress, belongs to the Brassicaceae family and is widely cultivated as a green manure and garden plant in China. During the prolonged rainy period in August 2020, leaf spot disease of O. violaceus was observed in the garden of Northeast Agricultural University, Harbin, Heilongjiang province. One week after the rainy days, the disease became more serious and the disease incidence ultimately reached approximately 80%. The disease symptoms began as small brown spots on the leaves, and gradually expanded to irregular or circular spots. As the disease progressed, spots became withered with grayish-white centers and surrounded by dark brown margins. Later on, the centers collapsed into holes. For severely affected plants, the spots coalesced into large necrotic areas and resulted in premature defoliation. No conidiophores or hyphae were present, and disease symptoms were not observed on other tissues of O. violaceus. To isolate the pathogen, ten leaves with typical symptoms were collected from different individual plants. Small square leaf pieces (5×5 mm) were excised from the junction of diseased and healthy tissues, disinfected in 75% ethanol solution for 1 min, rinsed in sterile distilled water, and then transferred to Petri dishes (9 cm in diameter) containing potato dextrose agar (PDA). After 3 days of incubation at 25 oC in darkness, newly grown-out mycelia were transferred onto fresh PDA and purified by single-spore isolation. Nine fungal isolates (NEAU-1 ~ NEAU-9) showing similar morphological characteristics were obtained and no other fungi were isolated. The isolation frequency from the leaves was almost 90%. On PDA plates, all colonies were grey-white with loose and cottony aerial hyphae, and then turned olive-green and eventually brown with grey-white margins. The fungus formed pale brown conidiophores with sparsely branched chains on potato carrot agar (PCA) plates after incubation at 25 oC in darkness for 7 days. Conidia were ellipsoidal or ovoid, light brown, and ranged from 18.4 to 59.1 × 9.2 to 22.3 µm in size, with zero to two longitudinal septa and one to five transverse septa and with a cylindrical light brown beak (n = 50). Based on the cultural and morphological characteristics, the fungus was tentatively identified as Alternaria tenuissima (Simmons 2007). Genomic DNA was extracted from the mycelia of five selected isolates (NEAU-1 ~ NEAU-5). The internal transcribed spacer region (ITS) was amplified and sequenced using primers ITS1/ITS4 (White et al., 1990). Blast analysis demonstrated that these five isolates had the same ITS sequence, and the ITS sequence of representative strain NEAU-5 (GenBank accession No. MW139354) showed 100% identity with the type strains of Alternaria alternata CBS916.96 and Alternaria tenuissima CBS918.96. Furthermore, the translation elongation factor 1-α gene (TEF), RNA polymerase II second largest subunit (RPB2), and glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GPD) of representative strain NEAU-5 were amplified and sequenced using primers EF1-728F/EF1-986R (Carbone and Kohn 1999), RPB2-5F2/RPB2-5R (Sung et al., 2007), and Gpd1/Gpd2 (Berbee et al., 1999), respectively. The sequences of RPB2, GPD, and TEF of strain NEAU-5 were submitted to GenBank with accession numbers of MW401634, MW165223, and MW165221, respectively. Phylogenetic trees based on ITS, RPB2, GPD, and TEF were constructed with the neighbour-joining and maximum-likelihood algorithms using MEGA software version 7.0. The results demonstrated that strain NEAU-5 formed a robust clade with A. tenuissima CBS918.96 (supported by 99% and 96% bootstrap values) in the neighbour-joining and maximum-likelihood trees. As mentioned above, strain NEAU-5 produced seldomly branched conidial chains on PCA plates. The pattern is consistent with that of A. tenuissima (Kunze) Wiltshire, but distinct from that of A. alternata which could produce abundant secondary ramification (Simmons 2007). Thus, strain NEAU-5 was identified as A. tenuissima based on its morphology and phylogeny. Pathogenicity tests were carried out by inoculating five unwounded leaves with a conidial suspension of strain NEAU-5 (approximately 106 conidia/ml) on five different healthy plants cultivated in garden, and an equal number of leaves on the same plants inoculated with sterilized ddH2O served as negative controls. Inoculated and control leaves were covered with clear plastic bags for 3 days. After 6 days, small brown and irregular or circular spots were observed on all leaves inoculated with conidial suspension, while no such symptoms were observed in the control. The tests were repeated three times. Furthermore, the pathogenicity tests were also performed using 2-month-old potted plants in a growth chamber (28 oC, 90% relative humidity, 12 h/12 h light/dark) with two repetitions. Five healthy plants were inoculated by spraying 20 ml of a conidial suspension of strain NEAU-5 (approximately 106 conidia/ml) onto unwounded leaves. Five other healthy plants were inoculated with sterilized ddH2O as controls. After 7 days, similar symptoms were observed on leaves inoculated with strain NEAU-5, whereas no symptoms were observed in the control. The pathogen was reisolated from the inoculated leaves and identified as A. tenuissima by morphological and molecular methods. In all pathogenicity tests, A. tenuissima could successfully infect unwounded leaves of O. violaceus, indicating a direct interaction between leaves and A. tenuissima. It is known that high humidity and fairly high temperatures can favor the epidemics of Alternaria leaf spot (Yang et al., 2018), and this may explain why severe leaf spot disease of O. violaceus was observed after prolonged rain. Previously, it has been reported that Alternaria brassicicola and Alternaria japonica could cause leaf blight and spot disease on O. violaceus in Hebei and Jiangsu Provinces, China, respectively (Guo et al., 2019; Sein et al., 2020). Although these pathogens could lead to similar disease symptoms on the leaves of O. violaceus, it is easy to distinguish them by the morphological characteristics of conidiophores and ITS gene sequences. To our knowledge, this is the first report of A. tenuissima causing leaf spot disease of O. violaceus in China.


2005 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 173-176
Author(s):  
Carl E. Niedziela ◽  
Christopher D. Mullins ◽  
T. David Reed ◽  
William H. Swallow ◽  
Eric Eberly

Pre-cooled bulbs of two dutch iris (Iris ×hollandica) cultivars, Ideal and White Wedgewood, were grown and harvested as cut flowers in four production systems in a tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) transplant greenhouse from late October until late January in two consecutive production years (2000-01 and 2001-02). All production systems (lily crates, lay-flat bags, pots, and float trays) utilized the same commercial peat-vermiculite, tobacco germination substrate. Stems developed more quickly but were shorter and lighter in 2001-02 than 2000-01 due to warmer growing conditions. Stems grown in float trays were shorter and lighter than other treatments in 2000-01 but similar to the others in 2001-02. Stems grown in lay-flat bags flowered earlier with similar or greater stem lengths and fresh weights as the other systems. Stems of `White Wedgewood' were longer and heavier than `Ideal'. In general, `White Wedgewood' provided more consistent production than `Ideal' in both production seasons. An economic analysis in this study concludes that a grower is unlikely to make money growing dutch iris in a tobacco transplant greenhouse using these production systems unless there is a targeted local market.


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