New Disease Reports (2008) 18, 34.

Occurrence of scab disease of pecan caused by Cladosporium caryigenum in Argentina

G. Mantz 1, S. Maiale 2*, C. Rollán 1 and L. Ronco 1

*santiagomaiale@hotmail.com

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Accepted: 04 Dec 2008

Pecan (Carya illinoinensis) is a new crop in Argentina. The planted area is expanding quickly with around 4000 h in the Pampas region, characterized by around 1000 mm annual rainfall and high humidity. In 2007 and 2008 we commonly observed typical scab symptoms on seedlings and mature trees in La Plata: small, circular black leaf spots, often coalescing, and an olive green to black mould below. Nuts, twigs and petioles also had black spots (Fig. 1).

We isolated a Cladosporium-like fungus on potato dextrose agar (PDA) from surface-sterilized pecan leaves collected from the Experimental Station of UNLP, La Plata. The conidiophores were dark brown, erect and septate (50–188 x 4–5 mm) (Fig. 2). Conidia were in chains, irregular, ovoid to ellipsoid, a few with two cells, pale olive green, (4–8 x 6–22 mm). These characteristics agree with a published description of Cladosporium caryigenum (Gottwald, 1982).

We inoculated the C. caryigenum isolate on detached leaves from one year-old seedlings, obtained from a tree selected as a source of rootstock, using a modified method described by Conner (2002). Conidia were harvested from two week-old PDA cultures grown at 24 0C and a suspension in sterile distilled water adjusted to 1x106 conidia/ml. The suspension was lightly brushed across the leaf surface while control treatments used sterile distilled water. All leaves were incubated for eight days at 25 0C and 16 h photoperiod. One cm2 pieces from the leaf centre were bleached and stained with trypan blue. Only inoculated leaves contained subcuticular hyphae and initial reproductive structures of C. caryigenum (Fig. 3) typical of a susceptible response (Conner & Stevenson, 2004). Pecan scab was reported from Paraguay by Kobayashi (1984) and there are earlier unconfirmed reports from Argentina. This, however, is the first confirmed report of Cladosporium caryigenum causing pecan scab in Argentina.

Figure1+
Figure 1: Pecan leaf and nut showing typical scab symptoms
Figure 1: Pecan leaf and nut showing typical scab symptoms
Figure2+
Figure 2: Colony and conidiophores of Cladosporium caryigenum
Figure 2: Colony and conidiophores of Cladosporium caryigenum
Figure3+
Figure 3: Subcuticular hyphae and initial reproductive structure of Cladosporium caryigenum from inoculated leaf
Figure 3: Subcuticular hyphae and initial reproductive structure of Cladosporium caryigenum from inoculated leaf

Acknowledgements

We thank Oscar A. Ruiz and Maria Marina for technical assistance.


References

  1. Conner PJ, 2002. A detached leaf technique for studying race-specific resistance to Cladosporium caryigenum in pecan. Journal of the American Society of Horticultural Science 127, 781-785.
  2. Conner PJ, Stevenson KL, 2004. Pathogenic variations of Cladosporium caryigenum isolates and corresponding differential resistance in pecan. HortScience 39, 553-557.
  3. Gottwald TR, 1982. Taxonomy of the pecan scab fungus Cladosporium caryigenum. Mycologia 74 (Suppl. 3), 382-390.
  4. Kobayashi T, 1984. Notes on fungi parasitic to woody plants in Paraguay. Transactions of the Mycological Society of Japan 25, 255-273.

This report was formally published in Plant Pathology

©2008 The Authors