New Disease Reports (2004) 10, 9.

First report of leaf anthracnose caused by Colletotrichum boninense on spindle trees

Hyang Burm Lee, Jae Young Park and Hack Sung Jung*

*minervas@snu.ac.kr

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Accepted: 21 Sep 2004

In autumn, 2003 and continuing on to next spring, leaf anthracnose was observed on spindle tree (Euonymus japonica) leaves on Kwanak Mountain, Seoul, Korea. The leaf spots were more severe on leaves near the ground and progressed to the upper leaves (Fig. 1). The causal fungus was aseptically isolated from the leaf spot lesions and cultured on potato dextrose agar (PDA). As shown in Fig. 2, the colony on PDA was whitish at the margin, cream-to-dull orange or black/brown, with dark areas of acervuli. Conidia were formed in black/orange masses and measured 13-17 x 5-7 μm in size. Dark brown setae were frequently observed on PDA and ranged up to 100 μm in length. When the 18S rDNA ITS sequence of the causal fungus was compared with eleven isolates of C. boninense retrieved from GenBank, the intraspecific DNA homologies were 97.4 to 99.6%. When compared with related species such as C. gloeosporioides, C. musae, C. fragariae, C. spinaceae and C. lindemuthianum, the interspecific DNA homologies were 93.9, 91.7, 93.6, 92.6 and 88.7%, respectively. Based on morphological, cultural and molecular characteristics, the fungus was identified as C. boninense, as described by Moriwaki et al. (2003).

For the pathogenicity test, 3-to-4 year old spindle tree leaves were inoculated with a conidial suspension (108 per ml) and kept for one week in a moist chamber at 25°C. Similar symptoms were observed on treated leaves and the causal fungus was re-isolated from leaf lesions. No symptoms were observed on uninoculated control plants.

Colletotrichum boninense previously fell within the broad species concept of C. gloeosporioides but is differentiated from C. gloeosporioides by colony shape, conidial morphology, and molecular phylogenetic analysis of ITS sequences (Lu et al., 2004; Moriwaki et al., 2003). C. gloeosporioides and C. griseum were once reported to occur on E. japonica in the United States (Grand, 1985; USDA, 1960) but there have been no reports on the distribution and host ranges for C. boninense. This is the first report on the leaf anthracnose caused by C. boninense in Korea as well as the first description on the occurrence of C. boninense on spindle trees.

Acknowledgements

This research was supported by grant No. R01-2002-000-00304-0 from the Basic Research Program of the Korea Science & Engineering Foundation and by the Brain Korea 21 Research Fellowship from the Ministry of Education & Human Resources Development.


References

  1. Grand LF, 1985. North Carolina plant disease index. North Carolina Agric. Res. Serv. Tech. Bull. 240, 1-157.
  2. Lu G, Canon PF, Reid A, Simmons CM, 2004. Diversity and molecular relationships of endophytic Colletotrichum isolates from the Iwokrama forest reserve, Guyana. Mycological Research 108, 53-63.
  3. Moriwaki J, Sato T, Tsukiboshi T, 2003. Morphological and molecular characterization of Colletotrichum boninense sp. nov. from Japan. Mycoscience 44, 47-53.
  4. USDA, 1960. Index of plant diseases in the United States. Agric. Handb. No. 165. US Gov. Print. Off., Washington, D.C. 531 pp.

This report was formally published in Plant Pathology

©2004 The Authors