Cocoyam is the second most important staple crop of Cameroon and root rot is a destructive disease of this plant. Pythium myriotylum (Pm), Fusarium solani (Fs), and Rhizoctonia solani (Rs) were isolated from the rhizosphere of root rot affected cocoyams and from the soil of a cocoyam experimental field plot temporarily devoid of same in Mamu, Cameroon. Pm was isolated from the above soil by the cocoyam leaf disc baits. Fs and Rs were also isolated from the same soils by the water dilution method and from the roots of diseased cocoyams but were always associated with mycelial growth of Pm. Pathogenicity of Pm and in combinations with Fs or Rs or Fs + Rs all developed cocoyam root rot disease (CRRD) symptoms on 3-and 7-month old cocoyam plantlets 2-7 days after inoculation. Symptoms included rotted roots and wilting with general chlorosis of inoculated plantlets. No symptoms of CRRD were noted on cocoyam plantlets inoculated with Fs, Rs, Fs -f-Rs, and distilled water. Results indicated that CRRD is not caused by several pathogens but only by Pm. Pm isolates from the soils and roots of diseased cocoyams and those maintained in the ROTREP laboratory have significantly bigger diameter of mycehal colony growth in 24 h-period at 31 °C on
Zoospores of Pythium myriotylum were consistently produced from sporangia of detached mycelia in vitro in deionized water at pH 7.0 with 0.001 M sucrose in 24 h of continuous fluorescent light at 31°C. The oblong‐to‐pea shaped zoospores measured from 2.5–7.5 μm in diameter and remained motile for more than 48 h. The lengths of flagella were 1–1.5 times the diameter of the zoospores. Contaminated cultures of P. myriotylum were revived to pure isolates by the use of zoospores. The penetration of P. myriotylum propagules took from 6 to 7 h following contact of the inoculum with the roots, and the invasion was inter‐ and intracellular. At the minimum concentrations of 200 zoospores/ml or 180 mycelial strands/ml, P. myriotylum caused symptoms of CRRD within 3 to 6 days after inoculation of the roots of cocoyam plantlets, results indicating that the pathogen is very destructive in cocoyam.
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