scholarly journals Three new pathogens infecting antilles cherry in the State of Pará

2003 ◽  
Vol 28 (4) ◽  
pp. 424-426 ◽  
Author(s):  
Luiz S. Poltronieri ◽  
Maria L. R. Duarte ◽  
Acelino C. Alfenas ◽  
Dinaldo R. Trindade ◽  
Fernando C. Albuquerque

When grown in monoculture, Antilles cherry (Malpighia glabra) plants have been affected by diseases which cause fruits malformation and spotting, reducing their value for market. From 1999 on, three new diseases characterised by leaf spot and fall of leaves have been observed in plantations located in Santa Izabel do Pará and Igarapé Açu counties. After isolation and pathogenicity tests on leaves of Antilles cherry plants, the isolates were identified as Calonectria ilicicola (anamorph: Cylindrocladium parasiticum) which causes large leaf spots reaching up to 7 cm long, brownish in colour, coalescent, scorching large leaf areas and causing 50% of leaf fall; Corynespora cassiicola, which provokes irregularly shaped, necrotic leaf spots with dark brown margins and white centers, surrounded by a yellow halo; and Myrothecium roridum which causes greyish target spots. Corynespora cassiicola has been reported causing leaf spots on different hosts in the Amazon region, while C. cassiicola has been recorded infecting Antilles cherry besides other hosts in the States of Maranhão and Pará.

Plant Disease ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 98 (11) ◽  
pp. 1586-1586 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Q. Yuan ◽  
Y. L. Xie ◽  
D. C. Tan ◽  
Q. Q. Li ◽  
W. Lin

Kiwifruit (Actinidia) is a common fruit cultivated in many countries. Actinidia deliciosa and A. chinensis are two commercially important kiwifruit species. Over 70,000 ha are grown annually in China. In 2012, a leaf spot disease of A. chinensis was observed in several orchards in Leye County (106°34′ E, 24°47′ N), Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, China. The disease mainly damaged the leaves during the fruit development stage through to the maturity stage. Initially reddish-brown small lesions appeared on the leaves; later, typical symptoms were tan to taupe lesions surrounded by purple brown margins, nearly circular to irregular, 2 to 10 × 2.2 to 15.5 mm in diameter. Some lesions exhibited a concentric pattern. The lesions eventually coalesced, causing extensive leaf necrosis and defoliation. The fungus that sporulated from lesions had the following morphological characteristics: light brown conidiophores with slightly swollen apexes, light brown conidia formed singly or in acropetal chains, straight or curved, cylindrical to oblavate, 52.9 to 240.5 μm long (avg. 138.9 μm) and 5.3 to 13.6 μm wide (avg. 8.4 μm), 5 to 12 distoseptate, with a flat, darkened, and thickened hilum. These morphological characteristics corresponded with that of Corynespora cassiicola (Berk. & Curt.) Wei (1). To isolate the pathogen of the disease, small pieces of symptomatic foliar tissues, including young lesions, typical older lesions, and atypical older lesions with concentric pattern were surface sterilized with 75% ethanol for 30 to 60 s, disinfected in 0.1% HgCl2 for 1 min followed by washing with sterile water, plated on PDA, and incubated at 28°C for 7 to 10 days. Gray to dark gray colonies and conidia of C. cassiicola were observed. To validate the identity of the fungus, the sequence of the ITS region of one of the purified strains, LYCc-1, was determined. DNA was extracted from the isolate that was grown on PDA at 28°C for 4 days, and the ITS region was amplified using the universal primer pair ITS4/ITS5 (2). The double strand consensus sequence was submitted to GenBank (KJ747095) and had 99% nt identity with published sequences of C. cassiicola in GenBank (JN853778, FJ852574, and FJ852587). Pathogenicity tests were carried out on detached leaves in petri dishes in an incubator at 28°C and on whole plants in a glasshouse at 25 ± 3°C. The isolations did not produce enough conidia in pure culture, so mycelial discs were used in pathogenicity tests. For both assays, 60-day-old healthy kiwifruit leaves were inoculated with a 5-mm mycelial disc obtained from the periphery of a 5-day-old C. cassiicola strain (LYCc-1) grown on PDA. The PDA discs were placed on the leaf surface with their mycelial surface down and secured with sterile wet cotton. Controls consisted of leaves that were inoculated with sterile PDA discs. For the detached leaf assay, the leaves were placed on filter paper reaching water saturation in petri dishes, and for the whole plant assays the inoculated leaves were kept moist with intermittent water sprays for 48 h. Four leaves of each plant were inoculated with the isolate in both assays, and experiment was repeated twice. Eight inoculated leaves of the detached leaf assay all showed the first water soaked lesions 36 h after inoculation, followed by extensive leaf rot 72 h after inoculation, and yielded abundant conidia of C. cassiicola. Six out of eight leaves inoculated on whole plants showed the first lesions 5 days after inoculation, whereas control leaves remained healthy. Only C. cassiicola was re-isolated from the lesions in both assays, fulfilling Koch's postulates. This is the first report of leaf spot caused by C. cassiicola on kiwifruit in China. References: (1) M. B. Ellis. Dematiaceous Hyphomycetes. CMI, Kew, Surrey, UK, 1971. (2) T. J. White et al. In: PCR Protocols: A Guide to Methods and Applications. Academic Press, San Diego, 1990.


Plant Disease ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 104 (7) ◽  
pp. 1994-2004
Author(s):  
Bo Liu ◽  
Larry Stein ◽  
Kimberly Cochran ◽  
Lindsey J. du Toit ◽  
Chunda Feng ◽  
...  

Leaf spot diseases have become a major concern in spinach production in the United States. Determining the causal agents of leaf spots on spinach, their prevalence and pathogenicity, and fungicide efficacy against these pathogens is vital for effective disease management. Spinach leaves with leaf spots were collected from Texas, California, Arizona, and South Carolina from 2016 to 2018, incubated in a moist chamber, and plated on potato dextrose and tryptic soy agar media. Fungal and bacterial colonies recovered were identified based on morphology and sequence analysis of the internal transcribed spacer rDNA and 16S rRNA, respectively. Two predominant genera were isolated: (i) Colletotrichum spp., which were identified to species based on sequences of both introns of the glutamate synthetase (GS-I) and glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (gapdh-I) genes; and (ii) Stemphylium spp., identified to species based on sequences of the gapdh and calmodulin (cmdA) genes. Anthracnose (Colletotrichum spinaciae) and Stemphylium leaf spot (Stemphylium vesicarium and S. beticola) were the predominant diseases. Additional fungi recovered at very limited frequencies that were also pathogenic to spinach included Colletotrichum coccodes, C. truncatum, Cercospora beticola, and Myrothecium verrucaria. All of the bacterial isolates were not pathogenic on spinach. Pathogenicity tests showed that C. spinaciae, S. vesicarium, and S. beticola caused significant leaf damage. The fungicides Bravo WeatherStik (chlorothalonil), Dithane F-45 (mancozeb), Cabrio (pyraclostrobin), and Merivon (fluxapyroxad and pyraclostrobin) were highly effective at reducing leaf spot severity caused by an isolate of each of C. spinaciae and S. vesicarium, when inoculated individually and in combination.


Phytotaxa ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 401 (4) ◽  
pp. 287
Author(s):  
DONG FANG PEI ◽  
SEIN LAI LAI AUNG ◽  
HAI FENG LIU ◽  
QUAN KE LIU ◽  
ZHI HE YU ◽  
...  

In 2017, a new fungal species, Alternaria hydrangeae, was isolated from necrotic leaf spots of Hydrangea paniculata in Shenyang Botanical Garden, Liaoning, China. Phylogenetic analyses based on five genes (ITS, GPDH, Alt a1, RPB2 and TEF1) indicated that the species is a new taxon closely related to Alternaria deserticola in section Porri. Both species were significantly different from each other based on cultural features on SNA and PCA. Previously, A. deserticola was morphologically considered as A. acalyphicola. With respect to conidial characters, the species was distinct from A. acalyphicola in conidia shape, size and transverse septa. Pathogenicity tests indicated that it could induce necrotic symptoms on its host. The species is illustrated here as a new one causing leaf spot on H. paniculata.


Plant Disease ◽  
1999 ◽  
Vol 83 (5) ◽  
pp. 487-487 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. Corazza ◽  
L. Luongo ◽  
M. Parisi

A leaf spot of kiwifruit (Actinidia deliciosa (A. Chev.) C. F. Liang & A. R. Ferg.) leaves was recently observed on plants of the cultivar Hayward in an orchard near Salerno, in southern Italy. The affected plants showed early severe defoliation. The fungus isolated from the infected leaves was identified as Alternaria alternata (Fr.:Fr.) Keissl., based on conidial morphological characteristics. Pathogenicity tests were made by inoculating detached leaves of male pollinator cultivar Tomuri and the female cultivars Hayward and Bruno with a 7-mm disk taken from actively growing cultures of the fungus on potato dextrose agar (PDA). After 14 days, necrotic leaf spots developed and A. alternata was consistently isolated from the inoculated leaves. A. alternata has been observed as a pathogen on leaves and fruits in New Zealand. In the Mediterranean, it has been reported in Israel (2) and in the island of Crete (1). This is the first report of Alternaria leaf spot on kiwifruit in Italy. References: (1) V. A. Bourbos and M. T. Skoudridakis. Petria 7:111, 1997. (2) A. Sive and D. Resnizky. Alon Hanotea 41:409, 1987.


Plant Disease ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. PDIS-04-20-0918
Author(s):  
Bo Liu ◽  
Larry Stein ◽  
Kimberly Cochran ◽  
Lindsey J. du Toit ◽  
Chunda Feng ◽  
...  

Leaf spot diseases of spinach, caused by Colletotrichum spinaciae, has become a major production constraint in several production areas, including Texas, in recent years. Leaf spot symptoms were observed in several fields in Texas in 2016 and 2017, with typical anthracnose-like symptoms and leaves with small, circular, and sunken lesions that appeared similar to injury from windblown sand. The lesions were plated on potato dextrose agar, from which fungal cultures were recovered. The fungi were identified based on morphology and sequence analysis of the introns of glutamate synthetase and glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (for isolates determined to be Colletotrichum spp.) and the internal transcribed spacer ribosomal DNA (for isolates determined to be Myrothecium spp.). Based on foliar symptoms, fungal colony and spore morphology, pathogenicity tests of fungal isolates on the spinach cultivar ‘Viroflay’, and DNA sequence analysis of the isolates, the symptoms on spinach leaves for two sets of samples were caused by Colletotrichum coccodes and Colletotrichum truncatum, and leaf spots resembling damage from windblown sand were caused by Myrothecium verrucaria. This is the first report of spinach leaf spot diseases caused by C. coccodes, C. truncatum, and M. verrucaria in the United States. C. coccodes and C. truncatum caused severe symptoms on the spinach cultivar ‘Viroflay’, whereas M. verrucaria caused symptoms of intermediate severity. Fungicide efficacy tests demonstrated that chlorothalonil, mancozeb, pyraclostrobin, fluxapyroxad + pyraclostrobin, and penthiopyrad were completely effective at preventing leaf spots caused by any of these pathogens when applied 24 h before inoculation of ‘Viroflay’ plants in greenhouse trials.


Plant Disease ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 96 (4) ◽  
pp. 586-586 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. H. Park ◽  
M. J. Park ◽  
S. H. Lee ◽  
H. D. Shin

Ailanthus altissima (Mill.) Swingle, known as tree-of-heaven, is a deciduous tree belonging to the family Simaroubaceae, which is native to both northeast and central China and Taiwan. The trees often have the ability to replace indigenous plants and disrupt native ecosystems (3). In August 2010, a leaf spot disease was observed on young trees in Yangpyeong, Korea. Field observation in 2010 and 2011 showed that infections are common on 1- or 2-year-old trees. Adult trees were rarely infected. Symptoms usually started at the margin of leaves and expanded into irregular, dark brown leaf spots, eventually causing significant premature defoliation. Representative samples were deposited in the herbarium of Korea University (KUS-F25174 and -F25304). Conidiophores of fungi observed microscopically on the leaf spots were erect, brown to dark brown, single or occasionally in clusters, 80 to 550 × 5 to 8 μm, and mostly arose on the abaxial surface of symptomatic leaves. Conidia were borne singly or in short chains of two to four, ranging from cylindrical to broadest at the base and tapering apically, straight to slightly curved, pale olivaceous brown, 3 to 18 pseudoseptate, 70 to 450 × 8 to 22 μm, each with a conspicuous thickened hilum. On potato dextrose agar, single-spore cultures of five isolates were identified as Corynespora cassiicola (Berk. & M.A. Curtis) C.T. Wei on the basis of morphological and cultural characteristics (1,4). A monoconidial isolate was preserved at the Korean Agricultural Culture Collection (Accession No. KACC45510). Genomic DNA was extracted with the DNeasy Plant Mini DNA Extraction Kit (Qiagen Inc., Valencia, CA). The complete internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region of rDNA was amplified with the primers ITS1/ITS4 and sequenced with an ABI Prism 337 automatic DNA sequencer (Applied Biosystems, Foster, CA). The resulting sequence of 548 bp was deposited in GenBank (Accession No. JN974462). The sequence showed >99% similarity (1-bp substitution) with a sequence of C. cassiicola from Ipomoea batatas (GenBank Accession No. FJ852716). To conduct a pathogenicity test, a conidial suspension (~2 × 104 conidia/ml) was prepared by harvesting conidia from 2-week-old cultures of KACC45510 and the suspension sprayed onto the leaves of three healthy seedlings. Three noninoculated seedlings served as control plants. Inoculated and noninoculated plants were kept in humid chambers for 48 h in a glasshouse. After 5 days, typical leaf spot symptoms started to develop on the leaves of all three inoculated plants. C. cassiicola was reisolated from the lesions, confirming Koch's postulates. No symptoms were observed on control plants. C. cassiicola is cosmopolitan with a very wide host range (2). To our knowledge, C. cassiicola has not been reported on A. altissima anywhere in the world. According to field observations in Korea, Corynespora leaf spot was most severe in August and September, especially following a prolonged period of moist weather. C. cassiicola may be a potential biocontrol agent for this highly invasive tree species. References: (1) M. B. Ellis. Dematiaceous Hyphomycetes. Commonwealth Mycological Institute: Kew, Surrey, England, 1971. (2) D. F. Farr and A. Y. Rossman. Fungal Databases. Systematic Mycology and Microbiology Laboratory, ARS, USDA, Retrieved from http://nt.ars-grin.gov/fungaldatabes/ , October 28, 2011. (3) L. B. Knapp and C. D. Canham. J. Torrey Bot. Soc. 127:307, 2000. (4) J. H. Kwon et al. Plant Pathol. J. 17:180, 2001.


Plant Disease ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 96 (11) ◽  
pp. 1691-1691
Author(s):  
M. Zhang ◽  
H. Y. Wu ◽  
Y. H. Geng ◽  
S. Q. Yu

Tree peony (Paeonia suffruticosa) is regarded as the national flower of China and is cultivated throughout the country. In early August 2010, a moderately severe leaf spot was observed on tree peony cultivated in a garden of Zhengzhou, Henan Province, where approximately 15% of trees were diseased. In 2011, a less damaging leaf spot was also observed in another area of the city with approximately 10% of trees diseased. Early symptoms appeared as small, round, pale-brown lesions on the leaves. Lesions expanded into 5- to 20-mm-diameter spots that were elliptical or irregular, brown to dark brown. A fungus was consistently isolated from the leaf spots on potato dextrose agar (PDA) in grey-black colonies, but produced few pycnidia. Black pycnidia were ostiolate, globose, papillate, formed in uniloculate or multiloculate stromata that were immersed in the leaf, and became erumpent at maturity. Conidiophores or conidiogenous cells were hyaline and cylindrical. Conidia were hyaline, granular, fusoid to ellipsoid, aseptate, with a sub-truncate base, and 20 to 28 × 4.5 to 7.5 μm (mean dimensions of 50 conidia: 24.5 × 5.2 μm). The pathogen was identified as Fusicoccum aesculi, anamorphic stage of Botryosphaeria dothidea, on the basis of morphology (2). The identity of the fungus was confirmed to be F. aesculi by DNA sequence analysis of the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region (GenBank Accession No. JQ323001), which was 100% identical to those of other F. aesculi isolates (GenBank Accession Nos. GU997686.1 and GU723469.1) (1). Pathogenicity tests were done by inoculating each of 10 leaves on one 7-year-old tree with a mycelial plug (0.5 cm diameter) harvested from the periphery of a 7-day-old colony. An equal number of leaves on the same tree, serving as controls, were mock-inoculated with plugs of PDA medium. Inoculated leaves were covered with plastic for 24 h to maintain high relative humidity and incubated at about 25°C. The plugs were removed after 48 h. After 7 days, 80% of the inoculated leaves showed symptoms identical to those observed in the field under natural conditions, whereas controls remained symptom-free. Reisolation of the fungus from lesions on inoculated leaves confirmed that the causal agent was F. aesculi. Pathogenicity tests were repeated on the other two trees by the same methods with the same results. To our knowledge, this is the first report of F. aesculi infecting P. suffruticosa in China. References: (1) S. Mohali et al. Mycol. Res. 110:405, 2006. (2) B. C. Sutton. The Coelomycetes. CABI Publishing, New York, 1980.


Plant Disease ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 94 (7) ◽  
pp. 916-916 ◽  
Author(s):  
X.-B. Liu ◽  
T. Shi ◽  
C.-P. Li ◽  
J.-M. Cai ◽  
G.-X. Huang

Cassava (Manihot esculenta) is an important economic crop in the tropical area of China. During a survey of diseases in July and September of 2009, leaf spots were observed on cassava plants at three separate plantations in Guangxi (Yunfu and Wuming) and Hainan (Baisha) provinces. Circular or irregular-shaped leaf spots were present on more than one-third of the plants. Spots were dark brown or had white papery centers delimited by dark brown rims and surrounded by a yellow halo. Usually, the main vein or small veinlets adjacent to the spots were dark. Some defoliation of plants was evident at the Wuming location. A fungus was isolated from symptomatic leaves from each of the three locations and designated CCCGX01, CCCGX02, and CCCHN01. Single-spore cultures of these isolates were incubated on potato dextrose agar (PDA) for 7 days with a 12-h light/dark cycle at a temperature of 28 ± 1°C. Conidiophores were straight to slightly curved, unbranched, and pale to light brown. Conidia were formed singly or in chains, obclavate to cylindrical, straight or curved, subhyaline-to-pale olivaceous brown, 19.6 to 150.3 μm long and 5.5 to 10.7 μm wide at the base, with 4 to 13 pseudosepta. Morphological characteristics of the specimen and their conidia were similar to the descriptions for Corynespora cassiicola (2). The isolate CCCGX01 was selected as a representative for molecular identification. Genomic DNA was extracted by the cetyltrimethylammoniumbromide protocol (3) from mycelia and used as a template for amplification of the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region of rDNA with primer pair ITS1/ITS4. The sequence (GenBank Accession No. GU138988) exactly matched several sequences (e.g., GenBank Accession Nos. FJ852715, EF198117, and AY238606) of C. cassiicola (1). Young, healthy, and fully expanded green leaves of cassava cv. SC205 were surface sterilized. Ten leaves were inoculated with 10-μl drops of 104 ml suspension of conidia and five leaves were inoculated with the same volume of sterile water to serve as controls. After inoculation, leaves were placed in a dew and dark chamber for 36 h at 25°C and subsequently transferred to the light for 5 days. All inoculated leaves with isolates showed symptoms similar to those observed in natural conditions, whereas the controls remained symptom free. The morphological characteristics of reisolated conidia that formed on the diseased parts were identical with the nature isolates. To our knowledge, this is the first report of leaf spot caused by C. cassiicola on cassava in China. References: (1) L. J. Dixon et al. Phytopathology 99:1015, 2009. (2) M. B. Ellis et al. Corynespora cassiicola. No. 303 in: CMI Description of Pathogenic Fungi and Bacteria. Commonwealth Mycological Institute, Kew, UK 1971. (3) J. R. Xu et al. Genetics 143:175, 1996.


Plant Disease ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 91 (8) ◽  
pp. 1052-1052 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Polizzi ◽  
F. M. Grasso ◽  
A. Vitale ◽  
D. Aiello

In April 2006, a new leaf disease occurred in a private garden in eastern Sicily (Italy) on young, 2-year-old seedlings of Mexican blue palm, Brahea armata S. Watson, in the Arecaceae. Symptoms were detected on 80% of seedlings. The leaves had minute, brown spots that enlarged into dark brown, circular or elliptical lesions, 3 to 6 mm in diameter, and with a necrotic, gray center. The lesions sometimes were surrounded by a chlorotic halo, and older leaves had larger chlorotic areas between spots. Conidia, conidiophores, and terminal vesicles were examined from diseased leaves. A Cylindrocladium sp. was consistently isolated from leaf lesions on Oxoid (Basingstoke, Hampshire, England) potato-dextrose agar after surface disinfestations with 0.8% NaOCl. Cylindrocladium isolates were cultured on carnation leaf agar (CLA) using single hyphal tips. Five isolates were established and identified as Calonectria pauciramosa C.L. Schoch & Crous based on obpyriform to broadly ellipsoidal terminal vesicles, conidiophore branching pattern, conidia size (52 × 4.6 μm), perithecium morphology, and ascopores size (36 × 6.8 μm). Perithecia were obtained with C. pauciramosa tester strains from Italy (G87 and G128) and South Africa (U 971 and U 1670) (2,3) that confirmed both mating types to be present. Further confirmation was obtained by internal transcribed spacer (ITS) analysis. The sequence of rDNA ITS1-5.8 S-ITS2 regions, obtained after amplification with primer ITS1 and ITS4, revealed that the Brahea isolates showed total homology with the sequence of the C. pauciramosa (STE-U 971 from soil) (= Cylindrocladium pauciramosum) available in GenBank. Isolate CBS 120619 from Mexican blue palm was deposited at Centraalbureau voor Schimmelcultures. Spray inoculations of 10 2-year-old Mexican blue palm seedlings were performed with a spore suspension of the fungus adjusted to 105 conidia per ml obtained from 14-day-old single-spore colonies on CLA at 24°C under cool white fluorescent irradiation on a 12-h light/dark regimen. In addition, the following species were similarly inoculated using 10 1-year-old plants: Arecastrum romanzoffianum (Cham.) Becc., B. edulis H. Wendl. ex S. Watson, Chamaerops humilis L., Howea forsteriana Becc., Phoenix canariensis Hort. ex Chabaud., Trachycarpus fortunei (Hook.) H. Wendl., and Ravenea rivularis Jumelle & Perrier. Inoculated, and 10 control plants were placed in separate plastic bags in a growth chamber at 25 ± 1°C. After 7 to 10 days, foliar symptoms including flecks and spots developed on both species of Brahea and on Chamaerops humilis, and on these hosts, pathogenicity tests were repeated. Other palm species and control plants remained healthy. C. pauciramosa was consistently reisolated from inoculated plants on the basis of vesicle shape and conidia sizes of the anamorph. Cylindrocladium candelabrum, Cylindrocladium colhounii, Cylindrocladium floridanum, Cylindrocladium parasiticum, Cylindrocladium pteridis, Cylindrocladium scoparium, and Cylindrocladium theae have been reported as leaf spots pathogens of Arecaceae (1). To our knowledge, this is the first occurrence of C. pauciramosa on Mexican blue palm and the first report of the pathogen on Arecaceae. References: (1) P. W. Crous. Taxonomy and Pathology of Cylindrocladium (Calonectria) and Allied Genera. The American Phytopathological Society, St. Paul MN, 2002. (2) P. W. Crous et al. Stud. Mycol. 50:415, 2004. (3) G. Polizzi and P. W. Crous Eur. J. Plant Pathol. 105:407, 1999.


Plant Disease ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 94 (1) ◽  
pp. 127-127 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y.-J. Zhao ◽  
B.-J. Li ◽  
Y.-X. Shi ◽  
X.-W. Xie

Common bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) is an economically important crop in China. In June 2008, a new foliar disease was observed on beans in Shunyi District, Beijing, China. The disease occurred in approximately 15% of the plants in a commercial field. Leaf spots were circular to irregular, reddish brown, zonate, and 8 to 20 mm in diameter. Black sporodochia with white tuffs were present on older lesions and black spore masses were present in moist weather. Ten isolates recovered from lesions produced white, floccose colonies and spore masses after 4 days on potato dextrose agar. The rod-shaped, hyaline conidia had rounded ends and averaged 6.8 × 2.5 μm. All characteristics were consistent with the description of Myrothecium roridum Tode ex Fr. (1). The internal transcribed spacer regions of one isolate were sequenced and deposited in GenBank (Accession No. GQ 381291). Sequences of the isolate from bean in China were 98% similar to sequences of M. roridum in GenBank. To determine pathogenicity, 30 healthy seedlings of common bean were inoculated by spraying a 1 × 105 conidia ml–1 suspension of M. roridum onto the foliage. Ten seedlings were sprayed with sterile water and served as controls. Plants were kept in a humid chamber at 27°C overnight and then placed in a growth chamber. After 6 days, the symptoms described above were observed on leaves in all inoculated plants, whereas symptoms did not develop on the control plants. The pathogen was reisolated from inoculated leaves, fulfilling Koch's postulates. There is one report of M. roridum on soybean in Korea (2). To our knowledge, this is the first report of Myrothecium leaf spot on common bean in China. References: (1) M. Fitton et al. CMI Mycol. Pap. No. 253, 1970. (2) K. J. Yum et al. Plant Pathol. J. 6:313, 1990.


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