scholarly journals First Report of Leaf Spot on Japanese Plum Caused by an Alternaria sp. in Korea

Plant Disease ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 89 (3) ◽  
pp. 343-343 ◽  
Author(s):  
Youngjun Kim ◽  
Hyang Burm Lee ◽  
Seung Hun Yu

Japanese plum (Prunus salicina Lindley) is a deciduous tree in the family Rosaceae. In Korea, this plant is widely distributed in orchards as an important stone fruit as well as in gardens as an ornamental tree because of their abundant white blossoms. Every September to November since 2001, leaf spots were observed on Japanese plum in a garden in Cheongyang, Chungnam District, Korea. Early symptoms consisted of small, brown spots that were 2 to 5 mm in diameter. Later, the leaf lesions became circular or irregular, dark brown, expanded to 15 mm in diameter, and resulted in discoloration with necrosis on twisted leaves that was followed by defoliation. In November, older lesions sometimes appeared blackish brown as sporulation occurred on the lesions. The causal fungus was isolated from diseased leaves and cultured on potato dextrose agar. A culture has been placed in the CABI Herbarium (IMI Accession No. 387139). Conidial dimension averaged 34 × 12 μm. On the basis of morphological characteristics of conidia and conidiophores, the causal fungus was identified as a small-spored species of Alternaria as described by E. G. Simmons (1). Pathogenicity tests were conducted by inoculating slightly wounded and nonwounded leaves with a conidial suspension adjusted to 1 × 106 conidia/ml. Four leaves per each experiment were either wounded or not and inoculated with a spore suspension. The eight leaves were placed in a moist chamber at 25°C. After 6 to 10 days, small brown spots appeared on 87% of the wounded and nonwounded leaves. Control leaves sprayed with distilled water did not develop any symptoms. The causal fungus was consistently reisolated from the leaf spots. Results from pathogenicity tests were similar in a repeated test. It is possible that small-spored Alternaria spp. isolates are host specific (2). Eight Alternaria spp., including A. alternata, A. tenuis, A. tenuissima, and A. citri, have been found to cause black spot on fifteen Prunus spp. in China, Japan, Hong Kong, Libya, Mexico, Australia, and the United States (2). Further studies on the host-specific toxin production, geographical distribution, and host ranges for the species of Alternaria isolated from Japanese plum are in progress. To our knowledge, this is the first report of leaf spot on Japanese plum (P. salicina) caused by a small-spored Alternaria sp. in Korea. References: (1) E. G. Simmons. Mycotaxon 55:79, 1995. (2) K. Inoue and H. Nasu. J. Gen. Plant Pathol. 66:18, 2002.

Plant Disease ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 97 (8) ◽  
pp. 1116-1116 ◽  
Author(s):  
V. Parkunan ◽  
S. Li ◽  
E. G. Fonsah ◽  
P. Ji

Research efforts were initiated in 2003 to identify and introduce banana (Musa spp.) cultivars suitable for production in Georgia (1). Selected cultivars have been evaluated since 2009 in Tifton Banana Garden, Tifton, GA, comprising of cold hardy, short cycle, and ornamental types. In spring and summer of 2012, 7 out of 13 cultivars (African Red, Blue Torres Island, Cacambou, Chinese Cavendish, Novaria, Raja Puri, and Veinte Cohol) showed tiny, oval (0.5 to 1.0 mm long and 0.3 to 0.9 mm wide), light to dark brown spots on the adaxial surface of the leaves. Spots were more concentrated along the midrib than the rest of the leaf and occurred on all except the newly emerged leaves. Leaf spots did not expand much in size, but the numbers approximately doubled during the season. Disease incidences on the seven cultivars ranged from 10 to 63% (10% on Blue Torres Island and 63% on Novaria), with an average of 35% when a total of 52 plants were evaluated. Six cultivars including Belle, Ice Cream, Dwarf Namwah, Kandarian, Praying Hands, and Saba did not show any spots. Tissue from infected leaves of the seven cultivars were surface sterilized with 0.5% NaOCl, plated onto potato dextrose agar (PDA) media and incubated at 25°C in the dark for 5 days. The plates were then incubated at room temperature (23 ± 2°C) under a 12-hour photoperiod for 3 days. Grayish black colonies developed from all the samples, which were further identified as Alternaria spp. based on the dark, brown, obclavate to obpyriform catenulate conidia with longitudinal and transverse septa tapering to a prominent beak attached in chains on a simple and short conidiophore (2). Conidia were 23 to 73 μm long and 15 to 35 μm wide, with a beak length of 5 to 10 μm, and had 3 to 6 transverse and 0 to 5 longitudinal septa. Single spore cultures of four isolates from four different cultivars were obtained and genomic DNA was extracted and the internal transcribed spacer (ITS1-5.8S-ITS2) regions of rDNA (562 bp) were amplified and sequenced with primers ITS1 and ITS4. MegaBLAST analysis of the four sequences showed that they were 100% identical to two Alternaria alternata isolates (GQ916545 and GQ169766). ITS sequence of a representative isolate VCT1FT1 from cv. Veinte Cohol was submitted to GenBank (JX985742). Pathogenicity assay was conducted using 1-month-old banana plants (cv. Veinte Cohol) grown in pots under greenhouse conditions (25 to 27°C). Three plants were spray inoculated with the isolate VCT1FT1 (100 ml suspension per plant containing 105 spores per ml) and incubated under 100% humidity for 2 days and then kept in the greenhouse. Three plants sprayed with water were used as a control. Leaf spots identical to those observed in the field were developed in a week on the inoculated plants but not on the non-inoculated control. The fungus was reisolated from the inoculated plants and the identity was confirmed by morphological characteristics and ITS sequencing. To our knowledge, this is the first report of Alternaria leaf spot caused by A. alternata on banana in the United States. Occurrence of the disease on some banana cultivars in Georgia provides useful information to potential producers, and the cultivars that were observed to be resistant to the disease may be more suitable for production. References: (1) E. G. Fonsah et al. J. Food Distrib. Res. 37:2, 2006. (2) E. G. Simmons. Alternaria: An identification manual. CBS Fungal Biodiversity Center, Utrecht, Netherlands, 2007.


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 ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 89 (11) ◽  
pp. 1243-1243 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Garibaldi ◽  
A. Minuto ◽  
M. L. Gullino

Iberis sempervirens (candytuft) is increasingly grown in Liguria (northern Italy) as a potted plant for ornamental purposes, particularly under cool-weather conditions. At the end of the summer of 2003, extensive necrosis was observed on leaves and young stems of 4-month-old plants grown in 14-cm diameter pots outdoors at a commercial farm. In many cases, on the upper side of the leaves, necrotic spots were surrounded by a chlorotic halo that turned progressively black. The necrotic areas often coalesced, generating larger and irregularly shaped spots. On the lower side of the leaves, no chlorotic areas were observed. Severely affected plants were defoliated. Infected plants rarely died, but the presence of lesions on mature plants decreased aesthetic quality and subsequently market value. The disease occurred on 40% of plants at each of the two farms. Leaf spots contained dark brown, multicellular pear-shaped conidia. Conidia were 22.5 to 50.0 μm (average 32.8 μm) long and 7.5 to 15.0 μm (average 12.3 μm) wide, with 5 to 7 longitudinal cross walls and an average of 6 to 7 single cells. From infected leaves, a fungus identified on the basis of its morphological characteristics as Alternaria sp. was consistently isolated on potato dextrose agar. Pathogenicity tests were performed by spraying leaves of healthy 12-month-old potted I. sempervirens plants with a spore and mycelial suspension (105 CFU/ml). Plants without inoculation served as control. Ten plants were used for each treatment. Plants were covered with plastic bags for 10 days after inoculation and kept outdoors for 60 days at temperatures ranging from 0 to 32°C (average 12°C). The first lesions developed on leaves 45 days after inoculation, while control plants remained healthy. From such lesions, Alternaria sp. was consistently reisolated. The pathogenicity test was carried out twice. The presence of A. brassicae was reported in Tanganica on Iberis sp., I. umbellata in Denmark (2), and I. amara in the United States (4); A. matthiolae was observed on seeds of I. amara and I. umbellata (3). A leaf spot incited by Alternaria sp. on I. amara was observed in Florida (1). This is, to our knowledge, the first report of Alternaria sp. on I. sempervirens in Italy as well as worldwide. References: (1) S. A. Alfieri et al. Index of Plant Diseases in Florida. Bull. 11, 1984. (2) P. Neergaard. Rev. Appl. Micol. 18:572, 1939. (3) P. Neergaard. Rev. Appl. Micol. 25:382, 1946). (4) R. D. Raabe. Comb. Proc. Int. Plant Propagators Soc. 40:160, 1991.


Plant Disease ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 96 (4) ◽  
pp. 584-584
Author(s):  
Q. Bai ◽  
Y. Xie ◽  
R. Dong ◽  
J. Gao ◽  
Y. Li

Pachysandra (Pachysandra terminalis, Buxaceae) and Japanese Pachysandra, also called Japanese Spurge, is a woody ornamental groundcover plant distributed mostly in Zhejiang, Guizhou, Henan, Hubei, Sichuan, Shanxi, and Gansu provinces in China. In April 2010, P. terminalis asymptomatic plants were shipped from Beijing Botanical Garden Institute of Botany Chinese Academy of Science to the garden nursery of Jilin Agricultural University (43°48′N, 125°23′E), Jilin Province. In June 2011, Volutella blight (sometimes called leaf blight and stem canker) of P. terminalis was observed on these plants. Infected leaves showed circular or irregular, tan-to-brown spots often with concentric rings and dark margins. The spots eventually grew and coalesced until the entire leaf died. Cankers appeared as greenish brown and water-soaked diseased areas, subsequently turning brown or black, and shriveled and often girdled the stems and stolons. During wet, humid weather in autumn, reddish orange, cushion-like fruiting structures of the fungus appeared on the stem cankers and undersides of leaf spots. Symptoms of the disease were consistent with previous descriptions (2–4). Five isolates were obtained from necrotic tissue of leaf spots and cankers of stems and stolons and cultured on potato dextrose agar. The colony surface was salmon colored and slimy. Conidia were hyaline, one celled, spindle shaped, and 12.57 to 22.23 × 3.33 to 4.15 μm with rounded ends. Morphological characteristics of the fungus were consistent with the description by Dodge (2), and the fungus was identified as Volutella pachysandricola (telemorph Pseudonectria pachysandricola). The internal transcribed spacer (ITS) regions of the nuclear rDNA were amplified using primers ITS4/ITS5 (1). The ITS sequences were 553 bp long and identical among these five isolates (GenBank Accession No. HE612114). They were 100% identical to Pseudonectria pachysandricola voucher KUS-F25663 (Accession No. JN797821) and 99% identical to P. pachysandricola culture-collection DAOM (Accession No. HQ897807). Pathogenicity was confirmed by spraying leaves of clonally propagated cuttings of P. terminalis with a conidial suspension (1 × 106 conidia/ml) of the isolated V. pachysandricola. Control leaves were sprayed with sterile water. Plants were covered with plastic bags and kept in a greenhouse at 20 to 25°C for 72 h. After 5 to 8 days, typical disease symptoms appeared on leaves, while the control plants remained healthy. V. pachysandricola was reisolated from the leaf spots of inoculated plants. Pachysandra leaf blight and stem canker also called Volutella blight, is the most destructive disease of P. terminalis and previously reported in the northern humid areas of the United States (Illinois, Connecticut, Ohio, Indiana, Iowa, Massachusetts, Missouri, Kentucky, and Wisconsin), northern Europe (Britain, Germany, and Poland), and the Czech Republic. To our knowledge, this is the first report of the disease caused by V. pachysandricola in China. The disease may become a more significant problem in P. terminalis cultivation areas if the disease spreads on P. terminalis in nursery beds. References: (1) D. E. L. Cooke et al. Mycol. Res. 101:667, 1997. (2) B. O. Dodge. Mycologia 36:532, 1944. (3) S. M. Douglas. Online publication. Volutella Blight of Pachysandra. The Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station, 2008. (4) I. Safrankova. Plant Protect. Sci.43:10, 2007.


Plant Disease ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 97 (9) ◽  
pp. 1256-1256 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. F. Zhai ◽  
J. Liu ◽  
M. X. Zhang ◽  
N. Hong ◽  
G. P. Wang ◽  
...  

Aloe vera L. var Chinese (Haw) Berg is a popular ornamental plant cultivated worldwide, whose extracts are used in cosmetics and medicine. Aloe plants are commonly affected by leaf spot disease caused by Alternaria alternata in Pakistan, India, and the United States (1). An outbreak of Alternaria leaf spot recently threatened aloe gel production and the value of ornamental commerce in Louisiana (1). During the summer of 2011, leaf spot symptoms were observed on A. vera plants growing in several greenhouses and ornamental gardens in Wuhan, Hubei Province, China. In two of the greenhouses, disease incidence reached 50 to 60%. The initial symptoms included chlorotic and brown spots that expanded to 2 to 4 mm in diameter and became darker with age. Lesions also developed on the tips of 30 to 50% of the leaves per plant. In severe infections, the lesions coalesced causing the entire leaf to become blighted and die. In September of 2012 and February of 2013, 10 symptomatic A. vera leaves were collected randomly from two greenhouses and gardens in Wuhan. A fungus was consistently recovered from approximately 80% of the tissue samples using conventional sterile protocols, and cultured on potato dextrose agar (PDA). The colonies were initially white, becoming grey to black, wool-like, and growing aerial mycelium covering the entire petri dish (9 cm in diameter) plate within 5 days when maintained in the dark at 25°C. The conidia were brown or black, spherical to subspherical, single celled (9 to 13 μm long × 11 to 15 μm wide), borne on hyaline vesicles at the tip of conidiophores. The conidiophores were short and rarely branched. These colonies were identified as Nigrospora oryzae based on the described morphological characteristics of N. oryzae (2). Genomic DNA was extracted from a representative isolate, LH-1, and the internal transcribed spacer region was amplified using primer pair ITS1/ITS4 (3). A 553-bp amplicon was obtained and sequenced. The resulting nucleotide sequence (GenBank Accession No. KC519728) had a high similarity of 99% to that of strain AHC-1 of N. oryzae (JQ864579). Pathogenicity tests for strain LH-1 were conducted in triplicate by placing agar pieces (5 mm in diameter) containing 5-day-old cultures on A. vera leaves. Four discs were placed on each punctured surface of each leaf. Noncolonized PDA agar pieces were inoculated as controls. Leaves were placed in moist chambers at 25°C with a 12-h photoperiod. After 3 days, the inoculated leaves showed symptoms similar to those observed in the greenhouses. N. oryzae was reisolated from these spots on the inoculated leaves. No visible symptoms developed on the control leaves. The pathogenicity tests were performed twice with the same results. Based on the results, N. oryzae was determined as a pathogen responsible for the leaf spots disease on A. vera. N. oryzae has been described as a leaf pathogen on fig (Ficus religiosa), cotton (Gossypium hirsutum) and Kentucky bluegrass (Poa pratensis) (4), and to our knowledge, this is the first report of N. oryae causing leaf spot disease on A. vera worldwide. References: (1) W. L. da Silva and R. Singh. Plant Dis. 86:1379, 2012. (2) M. B. Ellis. Dematiaceous Hyphomycetes, CAB, Kew, Surrey, England, 1971. (3) T. J. White et al. PCR Protocols: A Guide to Methods and Applications. Academic Press, San Diego, 1990. (4) L. X. Zhang et al. Plant Dis. 96:1379, 2012.


Plant Disease ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 96 (10) ◽  
pp. 1579-1579 ◽  
Author(s):  
Q. R. Bai ◽  
S. Han ◽  
Y. Y. Xie ◽  
R. Dong ◽  
J. Gao ◽  
...  

Daylily (Hemerocallis spp.) is an herbaceous, perennial plant, cultivated for its flowers. Daylily is sold in Asian markets as fresh or dried flowers (the flowers of some species, e.g., Hemerocallis citrina, are edible) or as the corm, which is used for medicinal purposes. In June 2011, daylily leaf streak was found in a nursery of Jilin Agricultural University, Jilin Province, China. Symptoms included water-soaked, irregular spots along the leaf midvein that turned orange to reddish brown and eventually enlarged to coalesce into extensive, necrotic streaks along the length of the leaf, as previously reported (2). Heavily infected leaves often withered and died. Four isolates were recovered from necrotic tissue of leaf spots and cultured on potato dextrose agar (PDA) at 25°C. All colonies were initially cream to peach colored and appeared slimy. With the maturation of the culture, the colonies became dark brown to black with sparse aerial hyphae. Blastic conidia formed simultaneously on intercalary or terminal, undifferentiated conidiogenous cells, and were scattered in dense sections on culture surface. When the conidia dropped from conidiogenous cell, an indistinct scar or a denticle remained. Conidia were hyaline, one-celled, smooth, ellipsoidal, and variable in size (2.73 to 6.01 × 8.45 to 19.36 μm), and all morphological characteristics were consistent with Kabatiella microsticta Bubak (syn. Aureobasidium microstictum; 2,4). The internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region of the nuclear rDNA was amplified using primers ITS4/ITS5 (1). ITS (534 bp) was identical among all four isolates (GenBank Accession No. HE798117) and 100% identical to that of K. microsticta CBS 114.64 (FJ150873). Pathogenicity was confirmed by spraying 20 seedlings of daylily, propagated in tissue-culture medium, with a conidial suspension (106 conidia/ml) of each isolate. A second set of 20 seedlings was sprayed with the same volume of sterile water as the noninoculated control treatment. Plants were grown in the greenhouse at 20 to 25°C and were covered with plastic bags to maintain humidity on the foliage for 72 h. After 5 days, the foliar symptoms described earlier for the field plants appeared on the leaves, whereas the control plants remained healthy. K. microsticta was reisolated from the leaf spots of all 20 inoculated plants. Leaf streak is the most destructive disease of daylily, and was previously reported in Japan and the United States (Illinois, Kentucky, Mississippi, Louisiana, Pennsylvania, Maryland, Virginia, Florida, North Carolina, and Georgia) (3). To our knowledge, this is the first report of the disease caused by K. microsticta in China. References: (1) D. E. L. Cooke et al. Mycol. Res. 101:667, 1997. (2) E. J. Hermanides-Nijhof. Stud. Mycol. 15:153, 1977. (3) R. M. Leahy et al. Plant Pathology Circular No. 376, 1996. (4) P. Zalar et al. Stud. Mycol. 61:21, 2008.


Plant Disease ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yun-fei Mao ◽  
Xiang-rong Zheng ◽  
Fengmao Chen

American sweetgum (Liquidambar styraciflua L.) is a forest plant native to North America, which has been introduced into other countries due to its ornamental and medicinal values. In June 2019, symptoms of leaf spots on sweetgum were observed in a field (5 ha) located in Xuzhou, Jiangsu Province, China. On this field, approximately 45% of 1,000 trees showed the same symptoms. Symptoms were observed showing irregular or circular dark brown necrotic lesions approximately 5 to 15 mm in diameter with a yellowish margin on the leaves. To isolate the pathogen, diseased leaf sections (4×4mm) were excised from the margin of the lesion, surface-sterilized with 0.1% NaOCl for 90 s, rinsed 4 times in sterile distilled water, air dried and then transferred on potato dextrose agar (PDA) medium at 25°C in the dark. Pure cultures were obtained by monospore isolation after subculture. Ten purified isolates, named FXI to FXR, were transferred to fresh PDA and incubated as above to allow for morphological and molecular identification. After 7 days, the aerial mycelium was abundant, fluffy and exhibited white to greyish-green coloration. The conidia were dark brown or olive, solitary or produced in chains, obclavate, with 1 to 15 pseudosepta, and measured 45 to 200µm  10 to 18µm. Based on morphological features, these 10 isolates were identified as Corynespora cassiicola (Ellis et al. 1971). Genomic DNA of each isolate was extracted from mycelia using the cetyltrimethylammonium bromide (CTAB) method. The EF-1α gene and ITS region were amplified and sequenced with the primer pairs rDNA ITS primers (ITS4/ITS5) (White et al. 1990) and EF1-728F/EF-986R (Carbone et al.1999) respectively. The sequences were deposited in GenBank. BLAST analysis revealed that the ITS sequence had 99.66% similarity to C. cassiicola MH255527 and that the EF-1α sequence had 100% similarity to C. cassiicola KX429668A. maximum likelihood phylogenetic analysis based on EF-1α and ITS sequences using MEGA 7 revealed that ten isolates were placed in the same clade as C. cassiicola (Isolate: XQ3-1; accession numbers: MH572687 and MH569606, respectively) at 98% bootstrap support. Based on the morphological characteristics and phylogenetic analyses, all isolates were identified as C. cassiicola. For the pathogenicity test, a 10 µl conidial suspension (1×105 spores/ml) of each isolate was dripped onto healthy leaves of 2-year-old sweetgum potted seedlings respectively. Leaves inoculated with sterile water served as controls. Three plants (3 leaves per plant) were conducted for each treatment. The experiment was repeat twice. All seedlings were enclosed in plastic transparent incubators to maintain high relative humidity (90% to 100%) and incubated in a greenhouse at 25°C with a 12-h photoperiod. After 10 days, leaves inoculated with conidial suspension of each isolate showed symptoms of leaf spots, similar to those observed in the field. Control plants were remained healthy. In order to reisolate the pathogen, surface-sterilized and monosporic isolation was conducted as described above. The same fungus was reisolated from the lesions of symptomatic leaves, and its identity was confirmed by molecular and morphological approaches, thus fulfilling Koch’s postulates. Chlorothalonil and Boscalid can be used to effectively control Corynespora leaf spot (Chairin T et al.2017). To our knowledge, this is the first report of leaf spot caused by C. cassiicola on L. styraciflua in China.


Plant Disease ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 91 (6) ◽  
pp. 770-770 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Garibaldi ◽  
G. Gilardi ◽  
M. L. Gullino

Lettuce (Lactuca sativa L.) is an important crop used for fresh and processing markets in Italy and is grown on more than 21,000 ha. During October and November of 2006, wilt symptoms were observed on field-grown lettuce, cv. Estelle, in Forlì, Emila Romagna (northeastern Italy) and on cv. Ballerina grown under plastichouses in Piedmont (northwestern Italy). Both lettuce cultivars were of a butterhead type. Affected plants were stunted and developed yellow leaves with brown or black streaks in the vascular tissue. Yellowing started from the external leaves. Discoloration was observed in the vascular tissue of roots, crown, and leaves. A fungus was consistently and readily isolated from symptomatic vascular tissue, previously disinfested in 1% sodium hypochlorite, when cultured on potato dextrose agar (PDA). Microscopic observations revealed hyaline hyphae with many ovoid, dark microsclerotia measuring 32 to 43 × 16 to 26 μm developing after 15 days of growth at 18°C in the dark. Conidiophores showed two verticils of three elements. Conidia were hyaline, elliptical, single celled, and measured 3.5 to 8.5 × 1.8 to 4.3 μm (average 5.5 × 2.5 μm). According to its morphological characteristics, the fungus was identified as Verticillium dahliae (2). Healthy, 20-day-old lettuce plants, cvs. Principessa and Maxima, both belonging to the butterhead type, were separately inoculated by root dip with a conidial suspension (106/ml) of two isolates of V. dahliae isolated, respectively, at Forlì and Torino. Noninoculated lettuce plants served as control treatments. Plants (10 per treatment) were grown in pots (10-liter vol.) in a steam-disinfested peat/perlite/sand (3:1:1 vol/vol) substrate and were maintained in a glasshouse at temperatures ranging between 17 and 22°C and relative humidity ranging between 60 and 70%. First wilt symptoms and vascular discoloration in the roots, crown, and veins developed 40 days after the artificial inoculation. Forty percent of the plants were affected in the case of cv. Maxima and 30% for cv. Principessa. Noninoculated plants remained healthy. The pathogenicity tests were repeated twice. To our knowledge, this is the first report in Italy of Verticillium wilt on lettuce. The disease has been previously reported in Greece (1) and the United States (3). Currently, Verticillium wilt of lettuce seems restricted in Italy to very few farms in the two locations; moreover, its incidence is very low (0.05%). References: (1) E. K. Ligoxigakis et al. Phytoparasitica 30:141, 2002. (2) G. F. Pegg and B. L. Brady. Verticillium Wilts. CABI Publishing, Wallingford, UK, 2002. (3) G. E. Vallad et al. Plant Dis. 89:317, 2005.


Plant Disease ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 94 (6) ◽  
pp. 788-788
Author(s):  
A. Garibaldi ◽  
D. Bertetti ◽  
M. T. Amatulli ◽  
M. L. Gullino

Rudbeckia fulgida (orange coneflower) is an herbaceous species (Asteraceae) grown in full sun in flower beds and borders in gardens. In the summer of 2009, a previously unknown leaf spot was observed on R. fulgida plants in three private gardens located near Biella (northern Italy). Leaves of infected plants showed extensive and irregular, dark brown, necrotic lesions that were slightly sunken with a well-defined border. Lesions initially ranged from 0.5 to 3 mm in diameter and eventually coalesced to cover the entire leaf, which curled without falling. At a later stage, stems were also affected, causing death of the plant. The disease affected 90% of plants. Dark brown pycnidia, 68 to 195 × 60 to 165 (average 135 × 117) μm in diameter, containing hyaline (light gray in mass), and ellipsoid, nonseptate conidia measuring 4.0 to 7.0 × 2.4 to 3.5 (average 5.4 × 3.0) μm were observed on symptomatic tissue. On the basis of these morphological characteristics, the fungus was related to the genus Phoma. Diseased tissue was excised from the margin of lesions, immersed in a solution containing 1% sodium hypochlorite for 2 to 3 s, rinsed in sterile distilled water, and then cultured on potato dextrose agar (PDA) medium. Fungal colonies initially produced a white mycelium that became greenish gray when incubated at temperatures ranging between 22 and 25°C under alternating daylight and darkness (13 h of light and 11 h of dark). After 14 days of incubation, unicellular, cylindrical or truncated cone-shaped, light brown chlamydospores measuring 6 to 12 μm in diameter developed in long chains. The internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region of rDNA was amplified using the primers ITS4/ITS6 and sequenced. BLAST analysis (1) of the 498-bp segment showed 100% homology with a sequence of a Phoma sp. (EF585395). The nucleotide sequence of our isolate was assigned GenBank Accession No. GU573979. Pathogenicity tests were performed by placing 100 ml of a water homogenate of mycelium (1 × 105 mycelial fragments/ml) obtained from 15-day-old PDA cultures of the fungus on leaves of three healthy 4-month-old potted R. fulgida plants. Three plants inoculated with a homogenate of PDA served as controls. Plants were maintained in a greenhouse, in a high humidity chamber for 7 days after inoculation, at temperatures ranging from 18 to 22°C and under high relative humidity conditions (70 to 90%). The first foliar lesions developed on leaves 7 days after inoculation, and after 10 to 12 days, 80% of leaves were severely infected. Control plants remained healthy. The organism reisolated on PDA from leaf lesions was identical in morphology to the isolate used for inoculation. The pathogenicity test was carried out twice. To our knowledge, this is the first report of the presence of a Phoma sp. on R. fulgida in Italy. Mycosphaerella ligulicola was reported on Rudbeckia sp. (2), while M. rudbeckiae and Phoma exigua have been reported on R. hirta (3). Currently, the economic importance of this disease is limited, but may become a more significant problem if the cultivation of this species increases. References: (1) S. F. Altschul et al. Nucleic Acids Res. 25:3389, 1997. (2) C. G. C. Chesters and J. P. Blakeman. Ann. Appl. Biol. 60:385, 1967. (3) D. F. Farr et al. Fungi on Plants and Plant Products in the United States. The American Phytopathological Society, St. Paul, MN, 1989.


Plant Disease ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 97 (7) ◽  
pp. 993-993
Author(s):  
S. T. Seo ◽  
C. H. Shin ◽  
J. H. Park ◽  
H. D. Shin

Melia azedarach L., called chinaberry, is native to Southeast Asia and Australia. The trees are commonly planted as ornamentals in the southern part of Korea. In October 2010, a leaf spot disease was observed on trees for the first time in Wando, Korea. Further surveys conducted from 2010 to 2012 showed that the disease occurs on trees in Jeju, Seogwipo, and Tongyeong cities as well as Wando county with nearly 100% incidence. Leaf spots were circular to semicircular, later becoming angular, small, pale brown in the center with a dark brown margin, and later becoming milky white. Leaf spots sometimes coalesced to blight the entire leaf and were capable of rapidly defoliating whole trees in late September. Fruiting was amphigenous, but mostly hypogenous. Stromata were substomatal, globular, dark brown, and 25 to 70 μm in diameter. Conidiophores were densely fasciculate, pale olivaceous to pale brown, substraight to mildly curved, not geniculate, 10 to 30 μm long, 2.5 to 4.5 μm wide, and aseptate or uniseptate. Conidia were pale olivaceous, generally darker than conidiophores, cylindric to obclavate, substraight in shorter ones, curved to mildly sinuous in longer ones, obconically truncate at the base, obtuse at the apex, 2- to 14-septate, 16 to 120 × 3 to 5 μm, guttulate, and had inconspicuous hila. Morphological characteristics of the fungus were consistent with the previous descriptions of Pseudocercospora subsessilis (Syd. & P. Syd.) Deighton (2). Voucher specimens (n = 6) were deposited in the Korea University Herbarium (KUS). An isolate from KUS-F25395 was deposited in the Korean Agricultural Culture Collection (KACC45688). The complete internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region of rDNA was amplified with the primers ITS1/ITS4 (3) and sequenced. The resulting sequence of 517 bp was deposited in GenBank (Accession No. JX993904). A BLAST search in GenBank revealed that the sequence shows >99% similarity (1 bp substitution) with a sequence of P. subsessilis ex M. azedarach from Cuba (GU269815). For pathogenicity tests, hyphal suspensions were prepared by grinding 3-week-old colonies grown on potato dextrose agar with distilled water using a mortar and pestle. Five 3-year-old chinaberry trees were inoculated with hyphal suspensions using a fine haired paint brush. Three healthy trees of the same age, serving as controls, were sprayed with sterile water. The plants were covered with plastic bags to maintain 100% relative humidity for 24 h and then transferred to a greenhouse. Typical symptoms of necrotic spots that appeared on the inoculated leaves 10 days after inoculation were identical to the ones observed in the field. P. subsessilis was reisolated from symptomatic leaf tissues, confirming Koch's postulates. No symptoms were observed on control plants. The disease has been reported in several Asian countries as well as in Cuba and the United States (1). To our knowledge, this is the first report of leaf spot on chinaberry caused by P. subsessilis in Korea. The observed high incidence and severity suggest that this disease can be a limiting factor in utilizing this tree species as ornamentals in public areas. References: (1) D. F. Farr and A. Y. Rossman. Fungal Databases. Syst. Mycol. Microbiol. Lab., Online publication, ARS, USDA, Retrieved October 22, 2012. (2) Y. L. Guo and W. H. Hsieh. The genus Pseudocercospora in China. International Academic Publishers, Beijing, China, 1995. (3) T. J. White et al. PCR Protocols. Academic Press, San Diego, CA, 1990.


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