Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 1 de 1
Filter
Add more filters










Database
Language
Publication year range
1.
Plant Dis ; 2023 Jun 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37283552

ABSTRACT

Wax apple (Syzygium samarangense) is an important fruit tree widely cultivated in China. Yield losses are usually serious due to different diseases among which anthracnose (Colletotrichum spp.) is one of the most damaging (He et al, 2019). This disease was found in Yunnan, China and an average incidence of 56.7% diseased leaves was recorded in21 orchards surveyed in July2021. The disease lesions on leaves were circular, angular or oval (7.2-15.6 mm), with whitish center and brown outer area surrounded by a yellow halo; irregular spots or blight areas formed later. It can also infect fruits forming pale-brown, circular and sunken spots before harvest and rot of stored fruits. Diseased leaves were sampled from orchards in Ximeng (N117.78oE39.89o) and Ninger (E101.04oN23.05o) counties of Yunnan for fungal isolation; three and five pure isolates were recovered from Ximeng (LWTJ1-LWTJ3) and Ninger (LB4-LB8) samples, respectively, by plating disinfested tissue (surface-sterilized with 2% NaClO3) on potato dextrose agar (PDA) followed by hyphal tip purification and incubation at 25oC. Two repeated tests following Koch's postulates were conducted to verify pathogenicity of the eight isolates. In each test, three healthy seedlings per isolate were sprayed with conidia suspenson (2.26×105cfu/mL) until runoff from leaves while control plants were sprayed with sterile water. The plants were kept in the dark at RH100 for 24 h in a black box and then in a growth chamber (28oC, RH>90% and lighting 12h/d). Detached fruits were inoculated with mycelial discs on the puncture-wound surface. Anthracnose symptoms developed on all seedlings and fruits inoculated with LWTJ2 or LB4 isolates, which were re-isolated from lesions of inoculated leaf/fruit, completing Koch's postulates. Control plants were healthy and symptomless. LWTJ2 and LB4 isolates were morphologically the same: the colonies on PDA were circular, pale-white, with cottony surface and readily forming orange conidium masses. The hyphae were hyaline, septate, branched mostly in near right angles. The conidia were hyaline, one-celled, smooth-walled, cylindrical with round ends, 9.8-17.5 (av.13.8) µm×4.4-6.5 (5.6) µm. The teleomorph was not observed in culture or on orchard trees. The morphological characters were consistent with those of C. siamense described by Weir et al (2012). The internal transcribed spacer region (ITS) was amplified from the two isolates by PCR and sequenced (1990) and were 545 bp in length (OL963924 & OL413460). BLAST analysis showed that both were 100% identical and they shared 99.08% identity with C. siamense WZ-365 from the ITS region (MN856443).The Tub2 (788 bp, ON637119) and Cal (768 bp, ON622249) genes (Weir et al, 2012) of LB4 were also obtained and they shared closest identity (99.45% & 100%) with those of C. siamense WZ-365 as well. Phylogenetic tree (neighbor-joining) analysis of the concatenated sequence of ITS, Tub2 and Cal genes of LB4 and those of related Colletotrichum spp. showed that LB4 clustered IN the same end-branch with C. siamense ICMP18578 (Bootstrap sup. = 98%). Thus, C. siamense was identified as the pathogen of wax apple anthracnose in Yunnan. It caused anthracnose on other crops as oranges and cacao (Azad et al, 2020). Also, C. fructicola and C. syzygicola were identified as pathogens of wax apple anthracnose in Thailand (Al-Obaidi et al, 2017). To our knowledge, this is the first report of C. siamense causing wax apple anthracnose in China.

SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL
...