4.7 Article

Pseudocercospora pancratii Causing Leaf Spots on Commercial Blackberry (Rubus sp.) in Florida

Journal

PLANT DISEASE
Volume 107, Issue 1, Pages 131-135

Publisher

AMER PHYTOPATHOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1094/PDIS-04-22-0900-RE

Keywords

blackberry; Cercospora; emerging disease; epidemiology; Florida; new pathogen; pathogen detection; small fruits; specialty crop

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Blackberry is the fourth most economically important berry crop, and its production is expanding in the southeastern United States. A study at the University of Florida identified a fungus, Pseudocercospora pancratii, as the causal agent of leaf spots on blackberry. No complete resistance was found among eight cultivars tested, but 'Osage' was the least susceptible and 'Kiowa' was the most susceptible. This study provides important information for disease management and future research for blackberry growers in Florida.
Blackberry (Rubus L. subgenus Rubus Watson) is a deciduous berry crop that is the fourth most economically important berry crop, and its production is expanding in the southeastern United States. However, since most commercially available cultivars were bred under temperate conditions, they are not always well adapted and could be threatened by new pathogen populations inhabiting subtropical areas. In 2017, plants showing purple or brown leaf spots and angular-to-irregular lesions on both leaf surfaces, with clusters of black conidiophores at the center, were observed in a field trial at the University of Florida's Gulf Coast Research and Education Center (UF/GCREC) in Wimauma, FL. A fungus resembling Cercospora/Pseudocercospora was isolated from the lesions. The ribosomal DNA internal transcribed spacers, the translation elongation factor 1-alpha, and the actin genes were amplified and sequenced. Based on the phylogenetic analysis, the closest related species was Pseudocercospora pancratii. Pathogenicity assays and subsequent reisolation confirmed that this species is the causal agent of the disease. Among eight cultivars screened, no complete resistance was found. However, 'Osage' was the least susceptible, and 'Kiowa' was the most susceptible. This study is the first report of P. pancratii causing leaf spots on blackberry worldwide, and it may help shape future research into disease epidemiology and management for a crop that is rapidly expanding but has very limited disease information currently available for Florida growers.

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