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First report of Coniothyrium canker of Eucalyptus
in Mexico
J. Roux*, M.J. Wingfield and D. Cibrián
Tree Pathology Co-operative Programme (TPCP), Forestry and
Agricultural Biotechnology Institute (FABI), University of Pretoria,
Pretoria, 0002, South Africa
Universidad Autónoma Chapingo, Chapingo, Estado de México, 56230,
México
*jolanda.roux@fabi.up.ac.za
Accepted for publication 09/08/01
Coniothyrium canker is an extremely damaging disease of Eucalyptus
species caused by the pycnidial ascomycete Coniothyrium zuluense.
The disease was first recognised in South Africa in 1989 although the
causal organism was not characterised and described until later
(Wingfield et al., 1997). Infection by C. zuluense
initially results in measle-like necrotic spots on branches and stems
(Fig. 1). These develop into large girdling cankers that reduce wood
quality and may lead to the death of trees. The stem infections also
restrict bark peeling prior to pulping resulting in increased labour and
other costs (Wingfield et al., 1997, Van Zyl et al., 1997;
Van Zyl, 1999).

Figure 1: single necrotic spots and developing cracks caused byC.
zuluense on the stem of a E. grandis clone
During a recent survey of Eucalyptus diseases in the Tabasco
state of Mexico, canker symptoms identical to coniothyrium canker were
observed on approximately five year-old E. grandis trees near Los
Choapas. Stem lesions contained pycnidia and conidia similar to those of
C. zuluense. However, C. zuluense lacks robust
morphological characteristics that clearly distinguish it from similar
species. To confirm our field and morphological identification we
examined the Mexican isolates by sequencing the internal transcribed
spacer region (ITS) of the ribosomal RNA operon and analysed the data
using PAUP* 4.0. This generated a single most parsimonious tree with a
consistency and retention index of 0.9218 and 0.9161 respectively.
Sequence analysis confirmed our preliminary morphological
identification of C. zuluense. A comparison between Mexican
isolates (Genebank Accension nrs. AF385610, AF385611) and published C.
zuluense sequence data (Van Zyl, 1999), show that the Mexican
isolates group closer to those from South Africa than to isolates from
Thailand, the only other known countries from which C. zuluense
has been recorded. The Mexican isolates have been deposited in the
culture collection of FABI, Pretoria.
The appearance of C. zuluense in Mexico is of considerable
concern given its known impact in countries such as South Africa. Field
evidence in Mexico suggests that C. zuluense isolates act in a
similar manner to those in South Africa. However, inoculation
experiments, currently not possible due to quarantine and other
limitations, are needed to compare pathogenicity of strains from the two
regions. Further work is needed to compare the pathogenic behaviour of
the Mexican isolates.
Participants in emerging Eucalyptus plantation programmes in
Mexico will need to seriously consider the possible impact of
Coniothyrium canker. Breeding and selection of disease tolerant clones
has been a useful strategy to reduce the impact of the disease in South
Africa and it should be equally effective in Mexico.
References
Van Zyl LM, Wingfield MJ, Couthinho, TA, 1997. Diversity among
isolates of Coniothyrium zuluense: A newly recorded Eucalyptus
stem canker pathogen in South Africa. In: IUFRO Conference on
Silviculture and improvement of Eucalypts, Salvador, 1997. Anais.
Colombo: EMBRAPA/CNPF, 1997. Volume 3, 135-141.
Van Zyl LM, 1999. Factors associated with Coniothyrium
canker of Eucalyptus in South Africa. Bloemfontein, South
Africa: University of the Orange Free State, PhD thesis.
Wingfield MJ, Crous PW, Coutinho TA, 1997. A serious new canker
disease of Eucalyptus in South Africa caused by a new species of Coniothyrium.
Mycopathologia 136, 139-145.
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