4.2 Article

Armillaria root rot threatens Cameroon's Penja pepper (Piper nigrumL.)

Journal

TROPICAL PLANT PATHOLOGY
Volume 45, Issue 5, Pages 534-543

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s40858-020-00361-w

Keywords

Armillaria camerunensis; Disease incidence; Molecular identification; Slow decline; Support tree

Categories

Funding

  1. University of Pretoria
  2. CIRAD
  3. IRAD
  4. Debt reduction-development contract (C2D) France Cameroon Poivre de Penja project

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Penja pepper (Piper nigrum) produced in Cameroon has long been recognized for its exceptional organoleptic quality. The pepper vine is grown using a support tree (Spondias mombin) in Cameroon. A root disease is associated with plant deaths in both plants. The disease symptoms are characterized by collar cracking and gummosis and the disease was tentatively identified as Armillaria root rot. In this work the extent of the problem was characterized by surveying 35 farms in Cameroon. Samples were taken from diseased support trees and pepper vines. Support trees exhibiting typical symptoms were found in approximately one third of the surveyed farms. In these farms, disease incidence and Pepper vine mortality ranged from 1.3 to 50% and 1.2 to 87.7%, respectively. Analysis of the ribosomal internal transcribed spacer region (ITS) locus suggested that the isolates collected fromS. mombinandP. nigrumare most likely, which is a first for both hosts, represented byArmillaria camerunensis(Henn.) Volk & Burdsall, a fungus previously associated with declining cacao trees in Cameroon. Given the increasing demand for Penja pepper and the great damaging potential of this root rot, research on management strategies should be prioritized.

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