New Disease Reports (2005) 12, 11.

First record of Phytophthora tropicalis causing leaf blight and fruit rot on breadfruit in Brazil

A.O. Cerqueira 1, E.D.M.N. Luz 1 and J.T. De Souza 1,2*

*jorge@cepec.gov.br

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Accepted: 16 Aug 2005

Breadfruit (Artocarpus altilis) has its centre of origin in Malaysia and was introduced by the Portuguese to Brazil, where it is grown mainly in the northeastern States. Its fruit can be used as food, its leaves as cattle fodder and the latex extracted from the fruits and trunk as raw material to produce glue.

In 2005, brown necrotic lesions were observed on leaves and fruits of breadfruit grown in the municipality of Itubera, Bahia State, in the northeast of Brazil (Fig. 1). A Phytophthora species was isolated from diseased leaf samples on selective medium PARPH (Kanmwischer & Mitchell, 1978). Analyses of morphological characteristics of five-day-old cultures grown on carrot agar showed a petaloid and sparse aerial mycelium. Observations and measurement of 50 sporangia revealed that they were ellipsoid, 37 µm ± 0.69 (standard error of the mean) x 23.8 µm ± 0.40, caducous with pedicels measuring 61 µm ± 3.08, with a length/width ratio of 1.9:1, mean depth of papillae 4.6 µm ± 0.13, and pore exit of 6.4 µm ± 0.20. Physiological tests showed that the isolate was heterothallic, mating type A1, forming amphigynous oogonia and antheridia. The isolate was deposited in the Brazilian collection of Phytophthora species under accession number CBP 546. The gene sequences obtained for ITS (Acc. No. AM040496), translation and elongation factor 1a (Acc. No. AM040497) and b-tubulin (Acc. No. AM040498) for isolate CBP 546 showed 99.8, 99.4 and 99.8% identity respectively, when compared to sequences AJ299733, AY564103 and AY564046 respectively of P. tropicalis.

Pathogenicity tests were performed by inoculating green fruits of breadfruit with 5-mm mycelial discs of 5-day old cultures of isolates CBP 546 from breadfruit, CBS 434.91 from macadamia of P. tropicalis and P. palmivora CBP 232 from cocoa. Inoculated fruits were incubated at 25°C in a humid chamber and lesions were observed 5 days later. The results showed that only P. tropicalis was pathogenic to fruits of breadfruit. This pathogen was re-isolated from the lesions onto PARPH medium.

These results confirm the identity of the isolate obtained from breadfruit as P. tropicalis. P. palmivora was identified as the agent of fruit rot on breadfruit in Micronesia, Western Samoa and India (Erwin & Ribeiro, 1996; Trujillo, 1970). As P. tropicalis was proposed recently as a new species to regroup the isolates of 'P. palmivora MF4' (= P. capsici) (Aragaki & Uchida, 2001), it is possible that the pathogen reported by these authors was P. tropicalis. This hypothesis is supported by our pathogenicity tests. This is the first report of P. tropicalis as a pathogen of breadfruit in Brazil.


References

  1. Aragaki M, Uchida JY, 2001. Morphological distinctions between Phytophthora capsici and P. tropicalis sp. nov. Mycologia 93, 137-145.
  2. Erwin DC, Ribeiro OK, 1996. Phytophthora diseases worldwide. St. Paul, USA: APS Press
  3. Kanmwischer ME, Mitchell DJ, 1978. The influence of a fungicide on the epidemiology of black shank of tobacco. Phytopathology 68, 1760-1765.
  4. Trujillo EE,1970. A Phytophthora fruit rot of breadfruit. Phytopathology 60, 1542.

This report was formally published in Plant Pathology

©2005 The Authors