In 2005, crop consultants in southwestern Georgia reported an unusual occurrence of leaf spot in cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.). Initial symptoms first developed as brick red dots that led to the formation of irregular to circular lesions with tan-to-light brown centers. Lesions further enlarged and often demonstrated a targetlike appearance formed from concentric rings within the spot. Observations included estimates of premature defoliation up to 70%, abundant characteristic spots on the leaves and bracts, and losses of several hundred kg of lint/ha. When symptomatic leaves were submitted to the University of Georgia Tifton Plant Disease Clinic in Tifton, GA, for identification in 2008, the causal agent was tentatively diagnosed as Corynespora cassiicola (Berk. & M.A. Curtis) C.T. Wei on the basis of similar symptoms and signs previously reported on cotton (3). In September 2011, symptomatic leaves were obtained from diseased cotton within a field (var. DP 1048B2RF) near Attapulgus, GA. Symptomatic tissue from diseased leaves was surface disinfested in 0.5% sodium hypochlorite for 1 min and plated on potato dextrose agar (PDA). Ten isolates were incubated at 21.1°C for 2 weeks with a 12/12 h light/dark cycle using fluorescent light located approximately 70 cm above the cultures. After 1 week, two isolates were transferred to quarter strength PDA for enhanced sporulation and were grown under the same conditions. Conidiophores from the isolated fungus were simple, erect, intermittently branching and septate, and gave rise to single, subhyaline conidia. Conidia had 4 to 17 pseudosepta and were 50 to 197 μm long and 7 to 16 μm wide, straight to curved, and obclavate to cylindrical. Pathogenicity tests were conducted by spraying 10 cotton seedlings (DP 555BR and DP 1048B2RF, two to four true leaf stage) until runoff with a blended suspension from a 2-week-old pure culture of the fungus diluted with 100 mL of sterile water. Five plants were sprayed with sterile water as noninoculated controls. Cotton seedlings were then incubated in a moist chamber at 21.1°C for 48 h. Within 1 week, all inoculated plants showed symptoms similar to those of diseased field plants. Symptoms were not observed on noninoculated control plants. The fungus was reisolated five times from symptomatic leaves and grown in pure culture. Conidia and conidiophores were identical to the morphology of the original isolates, and were similar to descriptions of C. cassiicola (2). To confirm the identity of the pathogen, DNA was extracted from a week-old culture and amplified with specific primers for loci “ga4” and “rDNA ITS” (1). DNA sequences obtained with the Applied Biosystems 3730xl 96-capillary DNA Analyzer showed 99% identity to C. cassiicola from BLAST analysis in GenBank. The resulting sequence was deposited into GenBank (Accession No. JQ717069). To our knowledge, this is the first report of this pathogen in Georgia. Given the increasing prevalence of this disease in southwestern Georgia, its confirmation is a significant step toward management recommendations for growers. Because foliar diseases caused by C. cassiicola are commonly referred to as “target spot” in other crops (e.g., soybeans), it is proposed that Corynespora leaf spot of cotton be known as “target spot of cotton.” References: (1) L. J. Dixon et al. Phytopathology 99:1015, 2009. (2) M. B. Ellis and P. Holliday. CMI Description of Pathogenic Fungi and Bacteria, 303, 1971. (3) J. P. Jones. Phytopathology 51:305, 1961.
and Tennessee (6,22). At that time, many researchers felt that the disease could become widespread in the Southeast and Midwestern states in 2005. However, by year's end, SBR was only observed in the Southeast. The disease did not spread to the Midwestern soybean producing states, perhaps due to low inoculum levels, low spore viability, and/or poor environmental conditions for SBR development.
Highlight Maximum emergence occurred when honey mesquite (Prosopis glandulosa Torr, var. glandulosa) seeds were planted 0.5 cm deep at a soil temperature of 27 C. Percent emergence was severely reduced at a soil temperature of 18 C, regardless of planting depth. Seeds placed on the soil surface germinated, but seedlings did not survive. Seeds planted 5 to 6 cm deep germinated, but no seedlings emerged. Rate and extent of emergence in a nursery were evidently dependent on the temperature reaching 24 C in the surface 2.5 cm of soil. l Approved by the Director, Texas Agricultural Experiment Station as TA-9157.
Phakopsora pachyrhizi Syd. & P. Syd., which causes Asian soybean rust (SBR), was observed on Florida beggarweed, Desmodium tortuosum (Sw) DC., in Attapulgus, GA during late October and early November 2005. Tan to brown lesions (<1.0 mm in diameter) consistent with symptoms of SBR (2) were observed on older leaves of several plants collected near an SBR-infected soybean trial. Dissection (40 to 60×) and compound microscopy (×200 to 400) revealed conical pustules and ellipsoid, echinulate urediniospores (average size 15 × 20 μm) on the abaxial leaf surface. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) (primers Ppm1 and Ppa2) (1) was conducted on four samples to confirm identification of P. pachyrhizi or P. meibomiae. Three were positive for P. pachyrhizi, and one was negative for both species. Using morphology and real-time PCR, SBR was confirmed as P. pachyrhizi by the USDA/APHIS in Beltsville, MD. Six noninfected Florida beggarweed plants were transplanted to pots during December 2005 and grown at 22 to 24°C in a greenhouse. On 11 January 2006, a water suspension of urediniospores collected from SBR-infected soybeans (1 × 105 spores per ml) was spray inoculated on all leaves to almost runoff and incubated for 48 h in a plastic humidity chamber. Lesions, pustules, and urediniospores consistent with SBR (2) were observed on 3 February 2006. A PCR assay was conducted on six samples from the infected greenhouse plants and all were positive for P. pachyrhizi. Florida beggarweed is widespread in the southern United States and may serve as an additional overwintering source for P. pachyrhizi and a potential inoculum source for the soybean crop. References: (1) R. D. Fredrick et al. Phytopathology 92:217, 2002. (2) J. B. Sinclair and G. L. Hartman. Soybean rust. Pages 25–26 in: Compendium of Soybean Diseases. 4th ed. G. L. Hartman et al., eds. The American Phytopathological Society, St. Paul, MN, 1999.
In October of 2001 and 2002, a leaf blight was reported affecting Vidalia onion (Allium cepa) cvs. Pegasus and Sweet Vidalia, respectively, in one field each. Lesions on onion seedlings began as a water-soaked, tip dieback that gradually blighted the entire leaf. Symptoms on onion transplants appeared as elongated, water-soaked lesions that typically collapsed at the point of initial infection. In both cases, disease was very severe on seedlings, and disease incidence was 50% or more in both fields. Warm temperatures combined with overhead irrigation and above average rainfall likely enhanced the severity and spread of disease. Disease was not detected on more mature onions once cool, dry conditions occurred later in the season, and no significant economic loss occurred. Seed was tested from seed lots of the aforementioned cultivars and Xanthomonas spp. were not found. Diseased tissue was macerated in sterile, phosphate-buffered saline, and 10 μl of the resulting suspension was streaked on nutrient agar plates. Yellow-pigmented, gram-negative, rod-shaped bacteria were isolated routinely from diseased tissue. Bacteria were catalase-positive, cellulolytic, oxidase-negative, amylolytic, proteolytic, and utilized glucose in an oxidative manner. Analysis of whole cell, fatty acid methyl esters (FAME) using the Microbial Identification System (MIS, Sherlock version 3.1; MIDI, Inc., Newark, DE) identified four representative strains of the bacterium as a pathovar of Xanthomonas axonopodis (similarity indices 0.75 to 0.83). Known Xanthomonas spp. from onion from Colorado and Texas (1,2) had similar FAME profiles when analyzed by the MIDI system. Onion plants were grown under greenhouse conditions for 2 months and inoculated by injecting the base of a quill with 1.0 ml of bacterial suspensions (1 × 107 CFU ml-1) of the Xanthomonas sp. isolated from Georgia, and negative controls were inoculated with 1 ml of sterile water. Disease symptoms developed on plants inoculated with bacterial suspensions in 4 to 7 days and Xanthomonas sp. was isolated from the lesions produced. Disease symptoms occurred when the same suspension was sprayed on onion foliage. No symptoms occurred on plants inoculated with 1 ml of sterile water. To our knowledge, this is the first report of Xanthomonas spp. affecting Vidalia onions. References: (1) T. Isakeit et al. Plant Dis. 84:201, 2000. (2) H. F. Schwartz and K. Otto. Plant Dis. 84:922, 2000.
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