3.8 Article

Phytophthora captiosa sp nov and P-fallax sp nov causing crown dieback of Eucalyptus in New Zealand

Journal

MYCOLOGICAL RESEARCH
Volume 110, Issue -, Pages 393-404

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.mycres.2006.01.008

Keywords

Eucalyptus spp; foliage disease; Phytophthora captiosa; Phytophthora fallax

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A locally severe crown disease of exotic plantation Eucalyptus trees has been recorded periodically in New Zealand since 1986. Symptoms include leaf spots, petiole infection and twig and small branch lesions. Outbreaks of disease are episodic and individual trees may show marked variation in crown symptoms ranging from unaffected to total defoliation. Two previously unknown species of Phytophthora are associated with the disease. These are described and formally designated here as P. captiosa, from Eucalyptus botryoides and E. saligna; and P. fallax, from E. delegatensis, E. fastigata, E. nitens and E. regnans. Both P. captiosa and P. fallax have non-papillate, non-caducous sporangia and both are self-fertile. Phylogenetic analysis on the basis of ITS rDNA sequence data indicates they are closely related to each other but evolutionarily distant from the majority of described Phytophthora taxa. They share a common ancestor with another assemblage of Phytophthora lineages that includes P. insolita, P. macrochlamydospora and P. richardine. Sporulation of P. captiosa and P. fallax has not been observed in the field. The mode of infection and spread of these non-caducous Phytophthora species in the eucalypt tree canopy remains unknown. This issue, and the possible geographic origins of these two Phytophthora species are discussed. (c) 2006 The British Mycological Society. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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