scholarly journals Sclerotium rolfsii, Penyebab Penyakit Busuk Pangkal Batang pada Hippeastrum sp.

2019 ◽  
Vol 15 (2) ◽  
pp. 53-58
Author(s):  
Antok Wahyu Sektiono ◽  
Syamsuddin Djauhari ◽  
Putri Devinta Pertiwi

Sclerotium rolfsii, a the Causal Agent of Stem Rot Disease on Hippeastrum sp.Symptoms of stem rot that cause Hippeastrum sp. or red lily wither, leaves turn yellow, and eventually die found at Mangliawan Village, District of Pakis, Malang - East Java. The purpose of this study was to identify the pathogens that cause root rot disease on lily plants and find out their host range. Sclerotium from the symptomatic base of the plant was isolated on potato dextrose agar medium. Fungus was identified based on the morphological characteristics of the colonies and mycelium. Host range test of pathogen was carried out by manual inoculation on Rain lily (Zephyranthes) St. Bernard's lily (Chlorophytum) and Beach Spider lily (Hymenocallis). The results of the identification showed that the fungus had white mycelium and formed sclerotium. Sclerotium is irregularly rounded, white when young, and dark brown when ripe, and forms 10 days after incubation. In hyphae, there are branching, septa, and clam connections. Based on the morphological characteristics of the disease the fungus was identified as Sclerotium rolfsii. In the host range test, the fungus was able to infect rain lilies and paris lilies, but not in spider lilies. This is the first report of S. rolfsii infection in lily in Indonesia.

2016 ◽  
Vol 82 (2) ◽  
pp. 96-104 ◽  
Author(s):  
Simi Jacob ◽  
Ramgopal Rao Sajjalaguddam ◽  
K. Vijay Krishna Kumar ◽  
Rajeev Varshney ◽  
Hari Kishan Sudini

Author(s):  
Ashish Kumar Gupta ◽  
Ravish Choudhary ◽  
Bishnu Maya Bashyal ◽  
Ishwar Singh Solanki

The incidence of Sclerotinia rot disease was recorded on various pigeonpea cultivars from flowering initiation to pod formation stage during the years 2012-13 and 2013-14. Critical symptoms of the disease were observed as formation of cottony white mycelium along with number of sclerotia on infected tissues. The pathogen was characterized on the basis of morphological and pathological traits. The cool wet winter with average minimum and maximum temperatures (9.2 and 21.0 ºC) and more than 93% relative humidity play an important role for stem rot disease development and spread in pigeonpea crop. The pigeonpea cultivar, ‘ICPL-151’ showed maximum disease incidence, twig infection and yield losses up to 73.35%, 23.58% and 15.70%, respectively, while ‘Kudrat’ and ‘MAL-13’ cultivars were found completely resistant to the disease.


Plant Disease ◽  
2002 ◽  
Vol 86 (11) ◽  
pp. 1211-1218 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. T. Browne ◽  
W. R. DeTar ◽  
B. L. Sanden ◽  
C. J. Phene

Drip and sprinkler systems were compared for effectiveness as preplant metam sodium chemigation systems and conduciveness to late-season development of stem rot disease on potato. Sclerotia of Sclerotium rolfsii were used in a bioassay to test efficacy of metam sodium treatments. Drip application of metam sodium (532 liters/ha, 32.8% a.i.) through lines at 7 cm of depth in preformed beds (depths from bed top unless stated otherwise) killed all test sclerotia at 15-, 30-, or 46-cm depths. Drip application of the metam sodium through drip lines at 41 or 46 cm of depth resulted in 0 to 17 or 68 to 80% survival, respectively, of test sclerotia at 15 cm of depth; but all the sclerotia at 30 or 46 cm of depth were killed. Compared with the drip applications, sprinkler chemigation with metam sodium generally treated beds less effectively (8 to 100% of sclerotia survived at 15 cm, 62 to 100% at 30 or 46 cm). On flat ground, drip and sprinkler chemigation (metam sodium, 560 liters/ha) performed equally (4, 37, and 77% survival at 15-, 45-, and 75-cm depths, respectively). After potato planting and artificial soil infestation with S. rolfsii (5 to 6 weeks before harvest), subsurface drip-irrigated plots (line depth of 41 or 46 cm) had lower incidence of stem rot disease at harvest (13 to 23% on tubers) than that in sprinkler plots (56 to 62%). The low incidence of disease was associated with relatively dry surface soil. Subsurface drip chemigation with metam sodium in preformed plant beds does not consistently eradicate S. rolfsii sclerotia near the upper bed surface but, in an arid climate, it is less conducive than sprinkler irrigation to development of stem rot disease of potato.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chakradhar Mattupalli ◽  
Jason Shiller ◽  
Prasanna Kankanala ◽  
Nick D Krom ◽  
Stephen Marek ◽  
...  

Phymatotrichopsis omnivora is a destructive plant pathogen causing root rot disease of alfalfa, cotton, pecan, grape, and many other important dicotyledonous species. A member of the family Rhizinaceae, in the class Pezizomycetes, P. omnivora is a soilborne ascomycete fungus that is difficult to maintain in culture, currently genetically intractable, and for which there are no publicly available genomic resources. We have generated draft genome sequences of four P. omnivora isolates obtained from cotton and alfalfa, growing in Texas and Oklahoma, USA. These genome sequences will provide new insights into the biology of the fungus, including the factors responsible for its broad host range and pathogenicity.


Plant Disease ◽  
2002 ◽  
Vol 86 (6) ◽  
pp. 697-697
Author(s):  
M. L. Molinero-Ruiz ◽  
J. M. Melero-Vara

In 2001, sunflower (Helianthus annuus L.) plants with symptoms of stem and root rot and wilt were observed in Soria, Spain. Light brown, water-soaked lesions developed on the collar of infected plants and extended along the stem, affecting the pith and causing early and sudden wilt. White mycelium and sclerotia (0.5 to 2 mm long) formed in the pith of stems. The sclerotia were disinfested in NaClO (10% vol/vol) for 1 min, transferred to potato dextrose agar (PDA), and incubated at 20°C. The fungus consistently obtained was identified as Sclerotinia minor Jagger (1). Pathogenicity was confirmed in a greenhouse experiment (15 to 25°C, 13 h light). Seven-week-old plants of six genotypes of sunflower (‘Peredovik’, HA89, HA821, HA61, RHA274, and HA337) were inoculated by placing one PDA disk with active mycelial growth adjacent to each basal stem just below the soil line and covering it with peat/sand/silt (2:2:1, vol/vol). Six plants of each genotype were inoculated without wounding, and another six were inoculated immediately after stem base wounding with a scalpel; six wounded and uninoculated plants were used as controls. First symptoms (wilting) appeared 4 days after inoculation in all genotypes. Two weeks after inoculation, the percentage of dead plants ranged from 33 to 92% (depending on cultivar), white mycelium was observed at the base of affected plants, and sclerotia were present in the pith of diseased plants. There was no effect of plant wounding on disease incidence or severity, and the fungus was reisolated from inoculated plants. To our knowledge, this is the first report of S. minor in Spain. Reference: (1) L. M. Kohn. Mycotaxon IX 2:365, 1979.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Khalid E. Hamed ◽  
Abdullah Alsoim ◽  
Ahmed Rogaibah

Abstract A survey in 2016 showed that more than 80% lebbeck trees inside the main campus of Qassim University were wilted and dead. Symptoms of dieback, root rot, stem cankers and decline were observed in the trees. The trunks exhibited black masses of spores which soon spread to other, healthy trees. A fungus, having arthroconidial and asexual synanamorph characteristics, and was identified as Neoscytalidiumdimidiatum KSA of the class Coelomycetes within the family Botryosphaeraceae and was subsequently isolated from the infected lebbeck trees. Six-year-old lebbeck seedlings were inoculated with the N. dimidiatum KSA isolate. Symptoms of chloroses followed by dropping leaves appeared four weeks after inoculation. The fungus re-isolated from the infected seedlings expressed the same morphological characteristics on the culture media as the N. dimidiatum KSA isolate. A host range study involving six different tree species were inoculated under growth chamber conditions using the identified isolate of the N. dimidiatum KSA fungus. Four weeks after the inoculation, three of these species exhibited wilting and died. To the best of our knowledge, this study is the first to report on N. dimidiatum in Saudi Arabia.


Plant Disease ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ying Xin Fang ◽  
Jin Ling Li ◽  
Xiao Fei Li ◽  
Min Zhong Chen ◽  
Jia Yi Lin ◽  
...  

Patchouli (Pogostemon cablin Benth.) is a perennial herb native to South and South East Asia, which widely used as a traditional herbal medicine against indigestion, diarrhea, cold, fever, vomiting and headache in China (Swamy and Sinniah, 2015). In September 2020, a new basal stem and root rot disease of patchouli was observed in three cultivated fields of Zhanjiang City, Guangdong Province. Symptoms included sudden discoloration, chlorosis and wilting of the leaves and severe rot associated with external and internal browning at the basal part of stems and roots that results in the death of approximately 2 to 5% of plants in each field. To determine the causal agent, symptomatic roots with typical lesions were cut into small pieces, then surface sterilized in 2.5% NaClO for 1 min, rinsed three times in distilled water, and then inoculated on potato dextrose agar (PDA) medium. A fungus with same morphological characteristics was consistently isolated from disease tissue. The mycelia initially white to cream, later turning pale brown to black with age on PDA. To induce the sporulation, the isolated fungi were transferred to synthetic nutrient-poor agar (SNA) with autoclaved pine needles and ten pure cultures were obtained by single spores. Masses of black, hard and oblong microsclerotia (av. 171.2×136.5 µm, n=50) were observed on SNA. Conidia hyaline, ellipsoid to obovoid, smooth, enclosed in a mucous sheath, 15.9~32.5×7.7~11.9 µm (av. 23.9 × 9.6 µm, n=100). The internal transcribed spacer (ITS) regions as well as the partial translation elongation factor (EF-1α) and β-tubulin (TUB) genes of two representative isolates GHX-1 and CHX-2 were sequenced, using primer pairs ITS1/ITS4 (White et al. 1990), EF-688F/EF-986R (Carbone and Kohn 1999), and Bt2a/Bt2b (Glass and Donaldson 1995), respectively. The obtained sequences were submitted to GenBank under the following accession numbers: ITS, MZ375360 and MZ375361; EF-1α, MZ393804 and MZ393805; and TUB, MZ393806 and MZ393807. BLASTn searches revealed that 100% identity with the existing sequences of ex-type culture CGMCC3.19503 of Macrophomina vaccinii (ITS, MK687450; EF-1α, MK687426; and TUB, MK687434), respectively. Phylogenetic analysis using Neighbour-Joining method in Mega7.0 with concatenated sequences of ITS, EF-1α and TUB showed that the isolates clustered in the clade of M. vaccinii with high bootstrap support values. Based on both of the morphological and molecular results, the isolates were identified as M. vaccinii (Zhao et al., 2019). To confirm the pathogenicity of the two isolates, 5-mm-diameter mycelial agar plus from the margins of 5-day-old PDA cultures were placed on the wounded basal stem of 2-month-old patchouli seedlings in each pot. Five separate pots were used for each isolate and plants inoculated with sterile agar plus were served as controls. All plants were covered with plastic bags to maintain 90% relative humidity and kept at 26°C with a photoperiod of 12 h in a greenhouse conditions. The patchouli plants developed similar necrotic symptoms on basal stem and root to those observed in the field after 3 weeks after inoculation, whereas the control plants were asymptomatic. M. vaccinii was reisolated from inoculated plants and identify by morphological and molecular characteristics, fulfill the Koch’s postulates and identify. Recently, stem blight on blueberry caused by M. vaccinii was reported in China (Zhao et al. 2019). To our knowledge, this is the first report of M. vaccinii causing basal stem and root rot on patchouli in China and worldwide.


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