First Report of Fusarium acuminatum Causing Postharvest Fruit Rot on Stored Vaccinium corymbosum in China

被引:5
|
作者
Wang, Y. [1 ,2 ]
Wang, C. W. [1 ,2 ]
Gao, J. [2 ]
Yang, L. N. [2 ]
机构
[1] Shanxi Agr Univ, Coll Agr, Taigu 030801, Shanxi Province, Peoples R China
[2] Jilin Agr Univ, Coll Agron, Changchun 130118, Jilin Province, Peoples R China
关键词
D O I
10.1094/PDIS-04-16-0529-PDN
中图分类号
Q94 [植物学];
学科分类号
071001 ;
摘要
Highbush blueberry (Vaccinium corymbosum L.), a flowering plant with dark purple berries, mainly used for fresh consumption, juice, jellies, jams, and pies (Kwon et al. 2011), is cultivated in southwest and northeast China on approximately 20,000 ha. In August 2015 in Changchun City, Jilin Province, China, fungal fruit rot was observed on stored highbush blueberry at about 5% incidence. Symptoms consisted of soft, slightly sunken, water-soaked lesions covered with abundant white and pink mycelia. Diseased fruits were surface-disinfested with 75% ethanol for 30 s, 0.1% HgCl2 for 1 min, washed three times in sterile water, dried, plated on potato dextrose agar (PDA), and incubated at 25°C for 7 days. Four isolates with similar morphology were isolated from single spores. Colonies grew slowly with growth diameters of 48 mm after 7 days, producing white mycelia and gradually becoming floccose with bright orange to rose pigmentation on PDA. On carnation leaf agar (CLA), abundant macroconidia were formed in sporodochia. Macroconidia were 3-to 5-septate with a distinctly curved apical cells and foot-shaped basal cells and measured 29.0 to 41.8 × 3.2 to 4.9 μm (n = 50). Microconidia were few, 0-to 1-septate, fusiform or reniform, measuring 7.3 to 12.9 × 2.5 to 2.9 μm (n = 50). Chlamydospores formed in chains. The morphological characteristics of the isolates were consistent with those of Fusarium acuminatum (Leslie and Summerell 2006). The identity was confirmed by the translation elongation factor (TEF-1α, 681 bp, GenBank accession no. KT965740), which had 100% identity to seven published accessions of F. acuminatum (KP325409 et al.); the rDNA internal transcribed spacer (ITS, 589 bp, KT965739) region (Fogliata et al. 2013), and beta-tubulin (TUB2, 1,295 bp, KT965741) region (Wang et al. 2014), which showed 99% similarity to 16 accessions (KF181242 et al.) and one published accession (KP325410), respectively. The ITS and TEF-1α sequences revealed 99.64% and 100% identity to F. acuminatum FD_01726 in FUSARIUM-ID database. To confirm pathogenicity, five ripe, healthy highbush blueberry fruits (cv. Black pearl) wounded with sterilized needles were inoculated with 50 μl conidial suspension (106 conidia/ml) of each isolate and inoculated at 25°C and 90% RH. Five fruits were inoculated with sterilized water as controls. The experiment was repeated three times. Within 6 to 8 days, all inoculated fruits developed symptoms similar to those observed on diseased fruits; no symptoms were observed on control fruits. The pathogen was reisolated from the inoculated fruits and exhibited same morphological characteristics as those of F. acuminatum. Presence of F. acuminatum causing branch blight on blueberry has been reported in Argentina (Wright et al. 2014); however, this is the first report of F. acuminatum causing postharvest fruit rot on stored highbush blueberry in China. This new disease could cause serious damage to highbush blueberry production in China. A detailed survey of the geographic distribution in China should be conducted along with research to determine management options. © 2016, American Phytopathological Society. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:2527 / 2528
页数:2
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] First Report of Fruit Rot on Postharvest Pumpkin Caused by Fusarium acuminatum in China
    Li, Y. G.
    Jiang, W. Y.
    Jiang, D.
    Wang, R. T.
    Tian, S.
    Ji, P.
    Jiang, B. W.
    PLANT DISEASE, 2019, 103 (05) : 1035 - 1035
  • [2] Fusarium acuminatum: A New Pathogen Causing Postharvest Rot on Stored Kiwifruit in China
    Wang, C. W.
    Ai, J.
    Fan, S. T.
    Lv, H. Y.
    Qin, H. Y.
    Yang, Y. M.
    Liu, Y. X.
    PLANT DISEASE, 2015, 99 (11) : 1644 - 1644
  • [3] First Report of Colletotrichum fioriniae Causing Anthracnose Fruit Rot on Vaccinium corymbosum in Chile
    Castro, J. F.
    Millas, P.
    Cisterna-Oyarce, V.
    Carrasco-Fernandez, J.
    Santelices, C.
    Munoz, V.
    Guerra, M.
    Barra-Bucarei, L.
    France, A.
    PLANT DISEASE, 2023, 107 (03)
  • [4] First Report of Postharvest Fruit Rot Caused by Fusarium equiseti on Stored Cerasus pseudocerasus in China
    Wang, C. W.
    Wang, Y.
    PLANT DISEASE, 2017, 101 (06) : 1041 - 1041
  • [5] First Report of Fusarium citri Causing Postharvest Fruit Rot of Chayote in Mexico
    Montecinos-Pedro, L. A.
    Ayala-Escobar, V.
    Arevalo-Galarza, M. L.
    Cadena-Iniguez, J.
    Leyva-Madrigal, K. Y.
    Mora-Romero, G. A.
    Tovar-Pedraza, J. M.
    PLANT DISEASE, 2023, 107 (07)
  • [6] First Report of Phytophthora cinnamomi Causing Root and Stem Rot of Blueberry (Vaccinium corymbosum) in China
    Lan, C. Z.
    Ruan, H. C.
    Yao, J. A.
    PLANT DISEASE, 2016, 100 (12) : 2537 - 2537
  • [7] First Report of Fusarium oxysporum Causing Fusarium Wilt on Blueberry (Vaccinium corymbosum) in Chile
    Moya-Elizondo, E. A.
    Doussoulin, H.
    San Martin, J.
    Ruiz, B.
    Del Vallee, P.
    PLANT DISEASE, 2019, 103 (10) : 2669 - 2669
  • [8] First Report of Botrytis cinerea Causing Postharvest Fruit Rot on Stored Pomegranates in Pakistan
    Alam, M. W.
    Rehman, A.
    Ahmad, S.
    Sarwar, M.
    Naseem, M. K.
    Chattha, M. B.
    Malik, A. U.
    Ali, S.
    PLANT DISEASE, 2019, 103 (02) : 374 - 374
  • [9] First Report of Fusarium pernambucanum Causing Fruit Rot of Melon in China
    Hao, Fangmin
    Dong, Wenjie
    Ma, Erlei
    Ding, Weihong
    Wang, Yuhong
    Zang, Quanyu
    PLANT DISEASE, 2024, 108 (07)
  • [10] First Report of Fusarium incarnatum Causing Fruit Rot of Litchi in China
    Gao, Z. Y.
    Wang, J. B.
    Zhang, Z. K.
    Li, M.
    Gong, D. Q.
    Hong, X. Y.
    Li, H. L.
    Wang, Y.
    Zhao, C.
    Hu, M. J.
    PLANT DISEASE, 2021, 105 (07)