4.7 Article

Identification and Characterization of Botryosphaeria spp. Causing Gummosis of Peach Trees in Hubei Province, Central China

Journal

PLANT DISEASE
Volume 95, Issue 11, Pages 1378-1384

Publisher

AMER PHYTOPATHOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1094/PDIS-12-10-0893

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Funding

  1. earmarked fund for Modern Agro-industry Technology Research System, China

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Wang, F., Zhao, L., Li, G., Huang, J., and Hsiang, T. 2011. Identification and characterization of Botryosphaeria spp. causing gummosis of peach trees in Hubei Province, central China. Plant Dis. 95:1378-1384. Peach (Prunus persica) is one of the most important and widely grown fruit trees in China; however, perennial gummosis on trunks and branches is a major problem in peach orchards of Hubei Province, one of the most important peach production areas of China. In order to identify the gummosis-causing agents, diseased trunks and branches were collected from 11 peach orchards in Hubei Province. Fungal isolates were obtained from these samples, yielding three species: Botryosphaeria dothidea (anamorph Fusicoccum aesculi), B. rhodina (anamorph Lasiodiplodia theobromae), and B. obtusa (anamorph Diplodia seriata). They were identified based on conidial morphology and cultural characteristics, as well as analyses of nucleotide sequences of three genomic regions: the internal transcribed spacer region, a partial sequence of the beta-tubulin gene, and the translation elongation factor 1-alpha gene. Fusicoccum aesculi was found in all 11 orchards but L. theobromae was found only in Shayang County in the Jingmen region and D. seriata only in Gong'an County in the Jingzhou region. Via artificial inoculation using mycelia on wounded twigs or branches, these three species were all found to be pathogenic, causing dark lesions on the twigs and branches and, sometimes, gum exudation from diseased parts. Isolates of L. theobromae were the most virulent and caused the largest lesions and most copious gummosis, and D. seriata had less gum than the other two species. This report represents the first description of L. theobromae and D. seriata as causal agents of gummosis on peach in China.

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