4.5 Article

Studies of Diaporthe species causing hazelnut canker disease in Beijing, China, with two new species described

Journal

PLANT PATHOLOGY
Volume 71, Issue 9, Pages 1980-1991

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ppa.13625

Keywords

Diaporthales; pathogenicity; phylogeny; plant disease; taxonomy

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [32101533]
  2. National Science and Technology Fundamental Resources Investigation Program of China [2021FY100900]
  3. National Undergraduate Training Programs for Innovation and Entrepreneurship [G202110022008]

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In this study, four Diaporthe species were identified, including two new species and two known species, through phylogenetic and morphological analyses. Pathogenicity tests confirmed three of these species as the causal agents of hazelnut canker. This study provides valuable information for the identification and management of hazelnut canker disease.
Hazelnut (Corylus heterophylla) is a common tree species grown as a crop with high economic value. However, many diseases caused by Diaporthe greatly affect the health of hazelnuts. In this study, 35 isolates were obtained from hazelnuts with typical canker symptoms in Beijing, China. Four species of Diaporthe were identified through multilocus phylogenetic (ITS, cal, his3, tef1-alpha and tub2) and morphological analyses, including two new species (Diaporthe donglingensis and D. huairouensis) and two known species (D. corylicola and D. eres). D. donglingensis, D. eres and D. huairouensis were confirmed as the causal agents of canker of hazelnut by pathogenicity tests conducted on 2-year-old plants in the greenhouse. The current study contributes to the identification of species causing canker disease of hazelnut and provides useful information for effective disease management.

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