scholarly journals First Report of Anthracnose Disease of Peace Lily [Spathiphylllum wallisii Regel.] Caused by Colletotrichum gloeosporioides from West Bengal

Author(s):  
Katakam Mounika ◽  
Birendranath Panja ◽  
Jayanta Saha
Plant Disease ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 98 (7) ◽  
pp. 991-991 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. J. Ma ◽  
X. Yang ◽  
X. R. Wang ◽  
Y. S. Zeng ◽  
M. D. Liao ◽  
...  

Hylocereus undatus widely grows in southern China. Some varieties are planted for their fruits, known as dragon fruits or Pitaya, while some varieties for their flowers known as Bawanghua. Fresh or dried flowers of Bawanghua are used as routine Chinese medicinal food. Since 2008, a serious anthracnose disease has led to great losses on Bawanghua flower production farms in the Baiyun district of Guangzhou city in China. Anthracnose symptoms on young stems of Bawanghua are reddish-brown, sunken lesions with pink masses of spores in the center. The lesions expand rapidly in the field or in storage, and may coalesce in the warm and wet environment in spring and summer in Guangzhou. Fewer flowers develop on infected stems than on healthy ones. The fungus overwinters in infected debris in the soil. The disease caused a loss of up to 50% on Bawanghua. Putative pathogenic fungi with whitish-orange colonies were isolated from a small piece of tissue (3 × 3 mm) cut from a lesion margin and cultured on potato dextrose agar in a growth chamber at 25°C, 80% RH. Dark colonies with acervuli bearing pinkish conidial masses formed 14 days later. Single celled conidia were 11 to 18 × 4 to 6 μm. Based on these morphological characteristics, the fungi were identified as Colletotrichum gloeosporioides (Penz.) Penz. & Sacc (2). To confirm this, DNA was extracted from isolate BWH1 and multilocus analyses were completed with DNA sequence data generated from partial ITS region of nrDNA, actin (ACT) and glutamine synthetase (GS) nucleotide sequences by PCR, with C. gloeosporioides specific primers as ITS4 (5′-TCCTCCGCTTATTGATATGC-3′) / CgInt (5′-GGCCTCCCGCCTCCGGGCGG-3′), GS-F (5′-ATGGCCGAGTACATCTGG-3′) / GS-R (5′-GAACCGTCGAAGTTCCAC-3′) and actin-R (5′-ATGTGCAAGGCCGGTTTCGC-3′) / actin-F (5′-TACGAGTCCTTCTGGCCCAT-3′). The sequence alignment results indicated that the obtained partial ITS sequence of 468 bp (GenBank Accession No. KF051997), actin sequence of 282 bp (KF712382), and GS sequence of 1,021 bp (KF719176) are 99%, 96%, and 95% identical to JQ676185.1 for partial ITS, FJ907430 for ACT, and FJ972589 for GS of C. gloeosporioides previously deposited, respectively. For testing its pathogenicity, 20 μl of conidia suspension (1 × 106 conidia/ml) using sterile distilled water (SDW) was inoculated into artificial wounds on six healthy young stems of Bawanghua using sterile fine-syringe needle. Meanwhile, 20 μl of SDW was inoculated on six healthy stems as a control. The inoculated stems were kept at 25°C, about 90% relative humidity. Three independent experiments were carried out. Reddish-brown lesions formed after 10 days, on 100% stems (18 in total) inoculated by C. gloeosporioides, while no lesion formed on any control. The pathogen was successfully re-isolated from the inoculated stem lesions on Bawanghua. Thus, Koch's postulates were fulfilled. Colletotrichum anthracnose has been reported on Pitaya in Japan (3), Malaysia (1) and in Brazil (4). To our knowledge, this is the first report of anthracnose disease caused by C. gloeosporioides on young stems of Bawanghua (H. undatus) in China. References: (1) M. Masyahit et al. Am. J. Appl. Sci. 6:902, 2009. (2) B. C. Sutton. Page 402 in: Colletotrichum Biology, Pathology and Control. J. A. Bailey and M. J. Jeger, eds. CAB International, Wallingford, UK, 1992. (3) S. Taba et al. Jpn. J. Phytopathol. 72:25, 2006. (4) L. M. Takahashi et al. Australas. Plant Dis. Notes 3:96, 2008.


Plant Disease ◽  
1997 ◽  
Vol 81 (6) ◽  
pp. 695-695 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. N. Fokunang ◽  
T. Ikotun ◽  
A. G. O. Dixon ◽  
C. N. Akem

Cassava anthracnose disease is a major economic disease of cassava in the tropics (2). Infection can lead to a significant loss in planting materials and total field crop failure. The disease has been reported to be transmitted mainly by a bug (Pseudotheraptus devastans Dist) (1). Open pollinated seeds from 13 cassava (Manihot esculenta Crantz) genotypes, stored for 10 months after harvest in 1994, were used to investigate the presence of the cassava anthracnose disease fungus. Seeds, 200 from each genotype, were surface sterilized, cultured on potato dextrose agar (PDA), and incubated for 8 days, at 25 ± 2°C. Microscopic examination indicated that Colletotrichum gloeosporioides was one of the seed-borne fungi, with up to 40% incidence recorded in some genotypes. Seeds from five susceptible genotypes selected for seed transmission studies were planted in fine, steam-sterilized soils in jiffy pots and watered daily for seedling emergence. At a height of 10 to 15 cm, the seedlings were transferred to plastic pots (10.5 cm in diameter) filled with sterilized mixture of soil and sand (2:2, vol/vol). Pots were placed close to each other to obtain a thick plant canopy. Temperature of 25 to 32°C and humidity of 80 to 98% were maintained. After 45 days, some plants had cassava anthracnose symptoms, including defoliation, wilt, and necrotic lesions. Stems, leaves, and roots of infected plants were washed, surface sterilized, and plated on PDA for 5 to 7 days. Microscopic observation of the fungus showed conidia of C. gloeosporioides. The rest of the plants were monitored for 3 months under vector-free conditions for typical anthracnose symptoms. Mean maximum wilt and defoliation of 35 to 38% was recorded in some genotypes. Conidial suspensions of C. gloeosporioides were used in stem-puncture inoculations of young, healthy cassava plants. The typical anthracnose symptoms of stem necrosis were observed 2 weeks after inoculation, confirming isolates as C. gloeosporioides f. sp. manihotis. This is the first report of C. gloeosporioides f. sp. manihotis being seed-borne and seed-transmitted in cassava. References: (1) B. Boher et al. Agronomie 3:989, 1983. (2) J. C. Lozano. PANS 20:30, 1974.


Plant Disease ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 103 (4) ◽  
pp. 763-763 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. Riera ◽  
D. Ramirez-Villacis ◽  
N. Barriga-Medina ◽  
J. Alvarez-Santana ◽  
K. Herrera ◽  
...  

Plant Disease ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 101 (12) ◽  
pp. 2151-2151 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. Li ◽  
H. Pan ◽  
M. Y. Chen ◽  
S. J. Zhang ◽  
C. H. Zhong

Plant Disease ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
María Julia Carbone ◽  
Victoria Moreira ◽  
Pedro Mondino ◽  
Sandra Alaniz

Peach (Prunus persica L.) is an economically important deciduous fruit crop in Uruguay. Anthracnose caused by species of the genus Colletotrichum is one of the major diseases in peach production, originating significant yield losses in United States (Hu et al. 2015), China (Du et al. 2017), Korea (Lee et al. 2018) and Brazil (Moreira et al. 2020). In February 2017, mature peach fruits cv. Pavia Canario with symptoms resembling anthracnose disease were collected from a commercial orchard located in Rincon del Colorado, Canelones, in the Southern region of Uruguay. Symptoms on peach fruit surface were characterized as circular, sunken, brown to dark-brown lesions ranging from 1 to 5 cm in diameter. Lesions were firm to touch with wrinkled concentric rings. All lesions progressed to the fruit core in a V-shaped pattern. The centers of the lesions were covered by orange conidial masses. Monosporic isolates obtained from the advancing margin of anthracnose lesions were grown on PDA at 25ºC and 12h photoperiod under fluorescent light. The representative isolates DzC1, DzC2 and DzC6 were morphologically and molecularly characterized. Upper surface of colonies varied from white or pale-gray to gray and on the reverse dark-gray with white to pale-gray margins. Conidia were cylindrical, with both ends predominantly rounded or one slightly acute, hyaline and aseptate. The length and width of conidia ranged from 9.5 to 18.9 µm (x ̅=14.1) and from 3.8 to 5.8 µm (x ̅=4.6), respectively. The ACT, βTUB2, GAPDH, APN2, APN2/MAT-IGS, and GAP2-IGS gene regions were amplified and sequenced with primers ACT-512F/ACT-783R (Carbone and Kohn, 1999), BT2Fd/BT4R (Woudenberg et al. 2009), GDF1/GDR1 (Guerber et al. 2003), CgDLR1/ColDLF3, CgDLF6/CgMAT1F2 (Rojas et al. 2010) and GAP1041/GAP-IGS2044 (Vieira et al. 2017) respectively and deposited in the GenBank database (MZ097888 to MZ097905). Multilocus phylogenetic analysis revealed that Uruguayan isolates clustered in a separate and well supported clade with sequences of the ex-type (isolate ICMP 18578) and other C. siamense strains (isolates Coll6, 1092, LF139 and CMM 4248). To confirm pathogenicity, mature and apparently healthy peach fruit cv. Pavia Canario were inoculated with the three representative isolates of C. siamense (six fruit per isolate). Fruit were surface disinfested with 70% ethanol and wounded with a sterile needle at two equidistant points (1 mm diameter x 1 mm deep). Then, fruit were inoculated with 5 µl of a spore suspension (1×106 conidia mL-1) in four inoculation points per fruit (two wounded and two unwounded). Six fruit mock-inoculated with 5 µl sterile water were used as controls. Inoculated fruit were placed in moist chamber and incubated at 25°C during 10 days. Anthracnose lesions appeared at 2 and 4 days after inoculation in wounded and unwounded points, respectively. After 7 days, disease incidence was 100% and 67% for wounded and unwounded fruit, respectively. The control treatment remained symptomless. The pathogens were re-isolated from all lesions and re-identified as C. siamense. C. siamense was previously reported in South Carolina causing anthracnose on peach (Hu et al. 2015). To our knowledge, this is the first report of anthracnose disease on peach caused by C. siamense in Uruguay. Effective management strategies should be implemented to control anthracnose and prevent the spread of this disease to other commercial peach orchards.


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