4.6 Article

Morphological, Pathological and Genetic Diversity of the Colletotrichum Species, Pathogenic on Solanaceous Vegetable Crops in Bulgaria

Journal

JOURNAL OF FUNGI
Volume 8, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/jof8111123

Keywords

phytopathogenic fungi; Colletotrichum nymphaeae; Colletotrichum godetiae; Colletotrichum salicis; Colletotrichum cigarro; multilocus DNA barcoding; genotyping

Funding

  1. Bulgarian Ministry of Education and Science, National Program European Scientific Networks [A01-271]
  2. South-East Europe SEE-ERA.NET PLUS [226/01]

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The study aimed to identify and characterize 26 pathogenic Colletotrichum isolates threatening solanaceous crops based on morphological, pathogenic, and molecular data, enriching the knowledge of their biodiversity and specific features.
Colletotrichum species are among the most devastating plant pathogens in a wide range of hosts. Their accurate identification requires a polyphasic approach, including geographical, ecological, morphological, and genetic data. Solanaceous crops are of significant economic importance for Bulgarian agriculture. Colletotrichum-associated diseases pose a serious threat to the yield and quality of production but are still largely unexplored. The aim of this study was to identify and characterize 26 pathogenic Colletotrichum isolates that threaten solanaceous crops based on morphological, pathogenic, and molecular data. DNA barcodes enabled the discrimination of three main taxonomic groups: C. acutatum, C. gloeosporioides, and C. coccodes. Three different species of acutatum complex (C. nymphaeae, C. godetiae, and C. salicis) and C. cigarro of the gloeosporioides complex were associated with fruit anthracnose in peppers and tomatoes. The C. coccodes group was divided in two clades: C. nigrum, isolated predominantly from fruits, and C. coccodes, isolated mainly from roots. Only C. salicis and C. cigarro produced sexual morphs. The species C. godetiae, C. salicis, and C. cigarro have not previously been reported in Bulgaria. Our results enrich the knowledge of the biodiversity and specific features of Colletotrichum species, which are pathogenic to solanaceous hosts, and may serve as a scientific platform for efficient disease control and resistance breeding.

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