First report of Colletotrichum fioriniae causing anthracnose on pear fruit in Serbia.

Autor: Živković S; Institute for Plant Protection and Environment, 229804, Department of Plant Diseases, Belgrade, Serbia; zivkovicsvetla@gmail.com., Trkulja N; Institute for Plant Protection and Environment, 229804, Department of Plant Diseases, Belgrade, Serbia; trkulja_nenad@yahoo.com., Kovačević S; Institute for Plant Protection and Environment, 229804, Department of Plant Diseases, Belgrade, Serbia; stefankovacevic96@gmail.com., Stošić S; Institute for Plant Protection and Environment, 229804, Department of Plant Disease, Beograd, Serbia; stefan.stosic@gmail.com.
Jazyk: angličtina
Zdroj: Plant disease [Plant Dis] 2022 Jul 04. Date of Electronic Publication: 2022 Jul 04.
DOI: 10.1094/PDIS-05-22-1019-PDN
Abstrakt: European pear ( Pyrus communis L.) is one of the most important fruits in Serbia, with a total production of 55,938 tonnes in 2021 (Statistical Office of the Republic of Serbia). In November 2021, pear fruits (cv. Santa Maria) with typical anthracnose symptoms were collected in one storage facility in the area of Smederevo, Serbia. The disease incidence was about 2%. A total of nine infected fruits had dark, circular, sunken necrotic lesions with concentric rings of orange conidial masses produced in black acervuli. The tissue pieces from the edges of lesions (3 to 5 mm 2 ) were surface-sterilized in 1% sodium hypochlorite for 1 min, rinsed twice in sterilized distilled water, air-dried, and incubated on potato dextrose agar (PDA) at 25°C. One isolate/diseased fruit was obtained (nine in total). Colony morphology of all isolates on PDA was light gray to pinkish on the upper side, and pink to vinaceous on reverse after 7 days of incubation at 25°C in the dark. Average growth rate was 64 ± 2 mm. The conidia were hyaline, fusiform, aseptate, smooth-walled, with both ends acute, and measured 12.8 to 16.6 µm × 3.5 to 4.5 µm (n =100). Appressoria were single, smooth-walled, dark brown, clavate to irregular outline, 5.5 to 9.6 × 4.8 to 7.2 μm (n =20). These morphological characterstics are consistent with the description of Damm et al. (2012) for Colletotrichum fioriniae . To confirm this identification, genomic DNA of representative isolate SZ-21-36 was extracted and the ITS region of the rDNA, partial beta-tubulin gene ( BenA ), glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase ( GAPDH ), and partial actin gene ( ACT ) were amplified using the primers ITS1/ITS4, Bt2a/Bt2b, GDF1/GDR1, and ACT512F/ACT783R, respectively (Hassan et al. 2019). The nucleotide sequence of each locus has been deposited in GenBank under Accession Nos. ON171625 (ITS), ON186696 ( BenA ), ON186697 ( GAPDH ), and ON186698 ( ACT ). Multilocus phylogenetic analysis based on the above mentioned molecular markers placed Serbian isolate of C. fioriniae with other isolates of this species deposited in GenBank (bootstrap support of 100%). Pathogenicity test was conducted on symptomless, detached pear fruits (cv. Santa Maria). Five surface-sterilized fruits were wound-inoculated with 50 μl of a conidial suspension (1 × 10 6 conidia/ml). After 10 days of incubation in a plastic chamber (25°C, 90% relative humidity, and 12-h photoperiod), typical anthracnose lesions developed on inoculated fruits. Five control fruits inoculated with sterile distilled water remained asymptomatic. The experiment was repeated once. Fungal colonies reisolated from the lesions showed the same morphological features as the original isolate. Pathogen was not reisolated from the control fruits. C. fioriniae was previously reported on European pear fruits in Croatia (Ivić et al. 2013), France (Da Lio et al. 2017), China (Fu et el. 2019), and in the USA (Pavlović et al. 2019). To our knowledge, this is the first report of anthracnose of pear fruit caused by C. fioriniae in Serbia. Currently, the economic impact of anthracnose caused by this pathogen is minimal, but its presence decreases commercial value and quality of pear fruits, and can be a risk to the further spread of C. fioriniae to other plant species.
Databáze: MEDLINE