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1.
Plant Dis ; 88(1): 87, 2004 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30812475

ABSTRACT

Phytophthora ramorum, the cause of sudden oak death in California and Oregon coastal forests and ramorum blight in European nurseries and landscapes (1), was detected in six Oregon nurseries in Jackson, Clackamas, and Washington counties from May to June 2003. The pathogen was isolated from: Viburnum bodnantense 'Dawn', V. plicatum var. tomentosum 'Mariesii', Pieris japonica × formosa 'Forest Flame', P. japonica 'Variegata' and 'Flaming Silver', P. floribunda × japonica 'Brouwer's Beauty', Camellia sasanqua 'Bonanza' and other cultivars, C. japonica, and Rhododendron × 'Unique'. Samples of symptomatic tissues were plated on a Phytophthora-selective medium (PARP) and tested by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) (3). All samples positive for P. ramorum with PCR yielded P. ramorum isolates in culture. The isolates have the European genotype, mating type A1, except for the Camellia spp. isolates, which have the North American genotype, mating type A2 (2). Isolates are deposited in the American Type Culture Collection. Koch's postulates for this pathogen have been completed on V. bodnantense and C. japonica (1). To confirm pathogenicity on the new hosts, isolates from V. plicatum var. tomentosum 'Mariesii', Pieris × 'Forest Flame', Pieris × 'Brouwer's Beauty', and P. japonica 'Variegata' and 'Flaming Silver' were used to inoculate healthy plants of the same cultivars. For isolates from Rhododendron × 'Unique' and C. sasanqua 'Bonanza', pathogenicity was tested on Rhododendron × 'Nova Zembla' and C. sasanqua 'Sutsugekka' and 'Kanjiro'. Three to five plants of each cultivar were inoculated and three to five were noninoculated. Zoospore inoculum was prepared on dilute V8 agar for one isolate from each host. Foliage of plants growing in 10-cm pots was dipped for 5 sec in a zoospore suspension (3 × 104 zoospores per ml) or sprayed to runoff with a hand mister (6 × 104 zoospores per ml). Control plants were dipped in or sprayed with sterile water. C. sasanqua plants were also inoculated by placing 6-mm mycelial plugs on individual leaves that had been wounded by piercing with a pin. Control leaves were wounded but not inoculated. Foliage was enclosed in plastic bags to retain humidity and the pathogen, and plants were incubated in a locked growth chamber (21 to 23°C). After 21 days, plants were examined for symptoms, and isolations onto PARP were made. All inoculated plants showed foliar symptoms, and P. ramorum was consistently isolated from inoculated plants, but not from asymptomatic control plants. On Rhododendron × 'Nova Zembla', nearly all leaves were wilted and dead, as were terminal buds and stems. Pieris spp. cultivars exhibited leaf and stem necrosis and defoliation. On V. plicatum var. tomentosum 'Mariesii', necrotic leaf lesions and defoliation of the lower leaves were observed. On C. sasanqua, necrotic lesions developed only on wounded leaves inoculated with mycelial plugs; these leaves abscised. Our results confirm the pathogenicity of Oregon nursery isolates of P. ramorum on V. plicatum var. tomentosum 'Mariesii', P. japonica × formosa 'Forest Flame', P. japonica 'Variegata' and 'Flaming Silver', P. floribunda × japonica 'Brouwer's Beauty', C. sasanqua and Rhododendron and complete Koch's postulates for several new hosts. References: (1) J. M. Davidson et al. Online publication. doi:10.1094/PHP-2003-0707-01-DG. Plant Health Progress, 2003. (2) E. M. Hansen et al. Plant Dis. 87:1267, 2003. (3) L. M. Winton and E. M. Hansen. For. Pathol. 31:275, 2001.

2.
J Nematol ; 33(4): 191-4, 2001 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19265880

ABSTRACT

A molecular analysis of eight described species of seed gall nematode, along with six undescribed isolates from different hosts, has revealed a strong association between nucleotide sequence polymorphism and host status. Each anguinid nematode associated with a unique host produced a unique PCR-RFLP pattern for the ITS1 region. Anguina species that had been synonymized in the past, Anguina agrostis, A. funesta, and A. wevelli (Afrina wevelli), were readily discriminated. Two undescribed species from northern New South Wales and southeastern South Australia, reported to be vectors of Rathyaibacter toxicus in the disease called ''floodplain staggers,'' were differentiated by a single restriction enzyme, and both could be separated easily from A. funesta, the vector of R. toxicus in annual ryegrass toxicity. Other species differentiated in this study include A. agropyronifloris, A. graminis, A. microlaenae, A. pacificae, and undescribed species from host species Dactylis glomerata, Agrostis avenacea, Polypogon monospeliensis, Stipa sp., Astrebla pectinata, and Holcus lanatus. Phylogenetic analysis of the ITS1 region suggests that considerable anguinid genetic diversification has accompanied specialization on different host species.

3.
Plant Dis ; 85(8): 919, 2001 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30823062

ABSTRACT

In June of 2000, garlic rust caused by Puccinia allii F. Rudolphi was detected in a single commercial garlic field (Allium sativum L.) in the Willamette Valley of western Oregon. To our knowledge, this is the first report of P. allii in Oregon. The pathogen was present in low levels throughout the majority of the garlic field with little apparent effect; however, several 10 to 20 m wide lenses of severely damaged plants were observed. In the lenses, the plants were stunted and the outer leaves were prematurely senescent. Uredia were abundant and irregularly scattered on the leaves and gave the heavily infected plants an orange cast. The field was resurveyed in August and telia and uredia were collected. Urediospores were ellipsoid and measured 29 to 35 × 20 to 26 µm. Urediospore walls were generally hyaline, 1 to 2 µm thick and echinulate. Telia were black, oval to elongate, and non-erumpent to slightly erumpent. Teliospores were predominantly two-celled and measured 40 to 62 × 19 to 30 µm. The cap cells were angular to acuminate and irregular. Pedicels were generally shorter than the length of the spore. These characteristics are consistent with published descriptions of P. allii (1). P. allii was not detected in any of the 103 garlic or 113 onion seed fields enrolled in the state's phytosanitary certification programs during 2000. References: (1) G. F. Laundon and J. M. Waterson. CMI Descr. Pathog. Fungi Bact. No. 52, 1965.

4.
J Nematol ; 31(4S): 635-40, 1999 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19270928

ABSTRACT

Four procedures were compared in their efficacy to extract juveniles of Anguina agrostis from commercial grass seed. The procedures included those currently used by the state regulatory laboratories of Oregon and California, as well as new tests developed to determine juvenile viability for the phytosanitary certification of fumigated grass seed. Eleven seed lots of Agrostis tenuis (bentgrass) and Dactylis glomerata (orchardgrass) naturally infested with varying levels of juveniles of Anguina were individually analyzed. Only one procedure, a new live recovery test, yielded nematodes in all 11 samples and is recommended as the best method for use by regulatory agencies. In comparison, although the other three extraction procedures resulted in greater numbers of Anguina agrostis juveniles per gram of seed, they failed to yield any nematodes in as many as four seed lots with low infection levels.

5.
J Nematol ; 21(4): 517-23, 1989 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19287647

ABSTRACT

Seven field populations of Xiphinema americanum sensu lato from California's major agronomic areas were tested for their ability to transmit two nepoviruses, including the prune brownline, peach yellow bud, and grapevine yellow vein strains of tomato ringspot virus and the bud blight strain of tobacco ringspot virus. Two field populations transmitted all isolates, one population transmitted all tomato ringspot virus isolates but failed to transmit bud blight strain of tobacco ringspot virus, and the remaining four populations failed to transmit any virus. Only one population, which transmitted all isolates, bad been associated with field spread of a nepovirus. As two California populations of Xiphinema americanum sensu lato were shown to have the ability to vector two different nepoviruses, a nematode taxonomy based on a parsimony of virus-vector relationship is not practical for these populations. Because two California populations of X. americanum were able to vector tobacco ringspot virus, commonly vectored by X. americanum in the eastern United States, these western populations cannot be differentiated from eastern populations by vector capability tests using tobacco ringspot virus.

6.
J Nematol ; 19(2): 158-63, 1987 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19290124

ABSTRACT

Amsinckia species (fiddleneck) in the South Coast Ranges of California were surveyed to determine if any of the 12 different California species of Amsinckia are hosts of the nematode, Anguina amsinckiae (Steiner and Scott, 1935) Thorne, 1961. Previously only Amsinckia intermedia Fischer and Meyer was reported as a host of Anguina amsinckiae. The survey established that there are at least two additional hosts of Anguina amsinckiae: Amsinckia lycopsoides Lehmann and Amsinckia gloriosa Suksdorf. Seven sites containing nematode-infected Amsinckia plants were discovered. Every site contained two or more species of Amsinckia; however, only one site contained more than one species of Amsinckia that was galled. Nematode specimens from A. intermedia, A. lycopsoides, and A. gloriosa were used in a morphometric analysis of 14 morphological variables. Stepwise discriminant analysis of the variables to separate the populations by host were successful for females, and the pairwise F-tests showed all three populations to have different group means (P < 0.05). Males from the three hosts were not always separable, however, as only the nematodes from Amsinckia gloriosa had a different group mean (P < 0.05).

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