1. Identification and Description of a New Pathogen Causing Flower Dry Rot on Passiflora edulis in China.
- Author
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Liu Y, Tang J, and Zhou Y
- Subjects
- China, Flowers, Phylogeny, Spores, Fungal, Fusarium classification, Fusarium pathogenicity, Passiflora microbiology, Plant Diseases microbiology
- Abstract
Passiflora edulis Sims (passion fruit) is an economically important fruit crop. However, a new flower dry rot has occurred in orchards located in Zhanjiang, China, and has led to serious production loss. Its disease incidence is approximately 30 to 40%. A total of 221 isolates of Fusarium sp. were obtained from samples of three types of symptomatic flowers. Three representative single-spore isolates (PaB-1, PaB-2, and PaB-3) from each type were used for pathogenicity tests, multilocus phylogenetic analyses, and morphological descriptions. Pathogenicity tests of buds of 5-month-old P. edulis plants showed symptoms similar to those observed in nature, and Koch's postulates were achieved. By comparing 36 typical species from the FUSARIUM -ID database, multilocus phylogenetic analyses showed that the sequences of TEF1 , RPB2 , and ITS of these isolates belong to the Incarnatum clade of the F. incarnatum-equiseti species complex (FIESC-17-a) with an independent branch. Therefore, the pathogenic isolates were identified as F. pernambucanum (FIESC-17-a). Moreover, in this study, the conidial anastomosis tubes were first observed in the FIESC. This is the first report of flower dry rot on P. edulis caused by F. pernambucanum . Further studies should be performed to determine effective disease management strategies.
- Published
- 2021
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