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1.
Plant Dis ; : PDIS06231137RE, 2024 Mar 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37845185

ABSTRACT

Fungal taxonomy is in constant flux, and the advent of reliable DNA barcodes has enabled the enhancement of plant pathogen identification accuracy. In California, Aspergillus vine canker (AVC) and summer bunch rot (SBR) are economically important diseases that affect the wood and fruit of grapevines, respectively, and their causal agents are primarily species of black aspergilli (Aspergillus section Nigri). During the last decade, the taxonomy of this fungal group has been rearranged several times using morphological, physiological, and genetic analyses, which resulted in the incorporation of multiple cryptic species that are difficult to distinguish. Therefore, in this study, we aimed to reassess the etiology of AVC and SBR using a combination of morphological observations with phylogenetic reconstructions based on nucleotide sequences of the calmodulin (CaM) gene. Results revealed that the isolates causing AVC from recent isolations corresponded to A. tubingensis, whereas the isolates obtained from initial surveys when the disease was discovered were confirmed as A. niger and A. carbonarius. Similarly, the isolates obtained from table grapes with SBR symptoms and from spore traps placed in those vineyards were identified primarily as A. tubingensis, followed by A. niger and A. carbonarius. Notably, the A. niger isolates formed a subclade with strains previously known as A. welwitschiae, which is a species that was recently synonymized with A. niger. Overall, the most prevalent species was A. tubingensis, which was associated with both AVC and SBR, and representative isolates recovered from AVC-symptomatic wood, berries SBR symptoms, and spore traps were equally pathogenic in healthy wood and berries of 'Red Globe' grapevines. This study also constitutes the first report of A. tubingensis causing AVC and SBR of grapes in California and in the United States.

2.
Plant Dis ; 2023 Nov 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37938909

ABSTRACT

California is the sixth largest apple-producing state in the United States with a production that reached 4,654 ha in 2021. During the late winter of 2023, black canker symptoms were observed on branches of 'Gravenstein' apple (Malus domestica) in two commercial orchards in Sonoma County, California. The prevalence of symptomatic trees ranged from 10 to 30%. External symptoms included charcoal looking-cankers with the bark peeling off from the primary and secondary branches. Internally, cankers were dark brown in color with a hard consistency. Pycnidia were observed on the surface of older cankers. Fungal isolations were performed from disinfected (70% ethanol, 30 s) symptomatic branch samples (n = 15). Small wood pieces (5 mm length) were taken from the margin of diseased and healthy tissues, and placed on potato dextrose agar acidified with 92% lactic acid at 0.5 mL per liter (APDA). Plates were incubated at room temperature (20-22 °C) for 7 days. Colonies of Botryosphaeriaceae species (Phillips et al. 2013) (n = 12) were consistently recovered and pure cultures were obtained by transferring a single hyphal tip onto fresh APDA. Colonies were light gray with irregular margins. To induce pycnidia formation, two isolates (UCD11350 and UCD11351) were grown on pistachio leaf agar for 21 days. Conidia (n = 50) were thick-walled and ovoid in shape, initially hyaline, then turned pale brown and dark brown at maturity, and some of them became 1-septate, ranging from 18.9 to 24.0 (21.9) × 11.5 to 14.7 (13.4) µm. Isolates were identified by sequencing a partial region of the beta-tubulin (tub2) gene using the primers Bt2a/Bt2b (Glass and Donaldson 1995). BLAST searches on NCBI GenBank revealed 99.5 % identity with the Diplodia bulgarica ex-type (CBS 1245254). To confirm the identity, the rRNA internal transcribed spacer (ITS) and the translation elongation factor 1-alpha (tef1) were also sequenced using ITS5/ITS4 (White et al. 1990), and EF1-688F/EF1-1251R (Alves et al. 2008), respectively. A maximum parsimony multi-locus phylogenetic analysis clustered Californian isolates with reference strains of D. bulgarica. Sequences were deposited in GenBank (nos. OR631209 to OR631210, OR637361 to OR637362, OR637363 to OR637364 for ITS, tub2, and tef1, respectively). Pathogenicity tests were conducted on 2 to 3-year-old branches (n = 5) of over 20-year-old trees by inserting a 5-mm segment of a toothpick, completely colonized with each of the two isolates mentioned above, into a 1-mm-diameter hole made with a sterile drill bit. The same number of branches where mock inoculated with a non-colonized toothpick as negative control. The experiment was performed twice. After ten weeks, inoculations resulted in dark brown necrotic lesions that ranged from 54.0 to 59.8 mm in length. Negative controls remained asymptomatic. Koch's postulates were fulfilled by successfully recovering the isolates from the lesion margins, which were confirmed by morphology. Diplodia bulgarica was first described affecting M. sylvestris in Bulgaria (Phillips et al. 2012), and then detected on M. domestica causing cankers in Iran (Abdollahzadeh 2015), India (Nabi et al. 2020), Germany (Hinrichs-Berger al. 2021) and Türkiye (Eken 2021). The pathogen was also identified causing postharvest fruit rot (Eken 2022). To our knowledge, this is the first report of D. bulgarica causing branch canker on apple in California, which provides important information for developing detection and control strategies.

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