Literature DB >> 30754353

First Report of Pitch Canker on Pines Caused by Fusarium circinatum in Portugal.

H Bragança1, E Diogo1, F Moniz1, P Amaro1.   

Abstract

In November of 2007, dieback symptoms (basal needle dieback, wilting, and dieback of terminal shoot) were observed on plant groups of Pinus radiata and P. pinaster in a tree nursery located in Anadia in the central region of Portugal (40°26'N, 08°23'W). Two containers with a total of 112 plants per pine species (with and without symptoms) were collected. Small pieces (5 mm long; two from the roots, stem at the soil level, and the aerial part, totaling six pieces) of 20 symptomatic plants were sterilized with 3% sodium hypochlorite, and isolations were performed on potato dextrose agar (PDA) supplemented with 0.5 mg/ml of streptomycin sulfate. A species of Fusarium was isolated from all infected tissues and pure cultures were obtained by single hyphal tip transfers on PDA and Spezieller Nährstoffarmer agar and incubated at 25°C for 10 days with a 12-h photoperiod. The species was identified as Fusarium circinatum Nirenberg & O'Donnell (= F. subglutinans Wollenweb & Reinking) on the basis of morphological and cultural characteristics (2). They produced white, aerial mycelia, violet pigment, typically three-septate macroconidia with slightly curved walls, single-celled microconidia, and characteristic sterile, coiled hyphae. Microconidia were ovoid or allantoid and born in false heads on aerial polyphialides. The identification was confirmed by PCR with specific primers CIRC1A/CIRC4A, resulting in a 360-bp DNA fragment of the two nuclear ribosomal intergenic spacer regions (3). Pathogenicity tests were performed by inoculating 5- and 9-month-old P. pinaster and P. radiata seedlings, respectively. Plants belonging to P. pinea species (8-month-old), the second most important pine in the country, were also included in the tests. Small strips of bark (10 × 1 mm) were cut from the stems and similar-sized pieces of PDA colonized by two isolates of F. circinatum were placed in contact with the open wounds and covered with Parafilm. Ten seedlings for each pine species, isolate, and control (with sterile PDA) were provided in a total of 90 plants. First symptoms, basal needle and shoot dieback, were observed in P. radiata 8 days after inoculation. One month later, all P. radiata and 70% of the P. pinaster plants were dead. In all P. pinea plants, needles turned red along the main stem, from center to periphery, but only 2% of these plants presented wilting of the terminal shoot after 1 month. No symptoms were observed on control seedlings. F. circinatum was reisolated from symptomatic plants of the three species tested. To our knowledge, this is the first report of F. circinatum in Portugal. Pitch canker, caused by Gibberella circinata (anamorph F. circinatum), is one of the most aggressive pathogens on several pine species in the world (1). In 2005, the fungus was detected in the European continent affecting P. radiata and P. pinaster in northern Spain. References: (1) E. Landeras et al. Plant Dis. 89:1015, 2005. (2) H. I. Niremberg and K. O'Donnell. Mycologia 90:434, 1998. (3) W. Schweigkofler et al. Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 70:3512, 2004.

Entities:  

Year:  2009        PMID: 30754353     DOI: 10.1094/PDIS-93-10-1079A

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Plant Dis        ISSN: 0191-2917            Impact factor:   4.438


  4 in total

1.  Transferability of PCR-based diagnostic protocols: An international collaborative case study assessing protocols targeting the quarantine pine pathogen Fusarium circinatum.

Authors:  Renaud Ioos; Francesco Aloi; Barbara Piškur; Cécile Guinet; Martin Mullett; Mónica Berbegal; Helena Bragança; Santa Olga Cacciola; Funda Oskay; Carolina Cornejo; Kalev Adamson; Clovis Douanla-Meli; Audrius Kačergius; Pablo Martínez-Álvarez; Justyna Anna Nowakowska; Nicola Luchi; Anna Maria Vettraino; Rodrigo Ahumada; Matias Pasquali; Gerda Fourie; Loukas Kanetis; Artur Alves; Luisa Ghelardini; Miloň Dvořák; Antonio Sanz-Ros; Julio J Diez; Jeyaseelan Baskarathevan; Jaime Aguayo
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2019-06-03       Impact factor: 4.379

2.  Pinus Susceptibility to Pitch Canker Triggers Specific Physiological Responses in Symptomatic Plants: An Integrated Approach.

Authors:  Joana Amaral; Barbara Correia; Carla António; Ana Margarida Rodrigues; Aurelio Gómez-Cadenas; Luis Valledor; Robert D Hancock; Artur Alves; Glória Pinto
Journal:  Front Plant Sci       Date:  2019-04-24       Impact factor: 5.753

3.  The transcriptome of Pinus pinaster under Fusarium circinatum challenge.

Authors:  Laura Hernandez-Escribano; Erik A Visser; Eugenia Iturritxa; Rosa Raposo; Sanushka Naidoo
Journal:  BMC Genomics       Date:  2020-01-08       Impact factor: 3.969

4.  Susceptibility of germinating seedlings of European and Eurasian populations of Pinus sylvestris to damping-off caused by Fusarium circinatum.

Authors:  Steve Woodward; J Asdrubel Flores-Pacheco; E Jordán Muñoz-Adalia; Pablo Martínez-Álvarez; Jorge Martín-García; Julio J Diez
Journal:  For Pathol       Date:  2022-06-10       Impact factor: 1.437

  4 in total

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