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First record of the rust Puccinia lagenophorae
Cooke on Emilia spp. in the UK
B. Henricot* and G. Denton
Plant Pathology Department, The Royal Horticultural Society, Wisley,
Woking, Surrey GU23 6QB, UK
*beatricehenricot@rhs.org.uk
Accepted for publication 22/11/04
Emilia coccinea (tasselflower) and E. sonchifolia
(Cupid’s shaving brush) are widely available ornamentals, that are
grown in the UK for their attractive display of small red flowers during
the summer. In July 2004, plants showing symptoms of rust were found at
Wisley gardens in Surrey (Fig. 1).
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Figure 1: Aecia on the leaves of Emilia
coccinea |
Figure 2: Telia on the stems of Emilia
sonchifolia |
Aeciospores were orange, round to obovate, 16-18 x 16-20 µm in
diameter. Aecia appeared on both sides of the leaves and stems.
Production of teliospores was noted during August. Telia appeared as
black raised blisters on the stems, sometimes several centimetres long
(Fig. 2). Teliospores were stalked, two-celled (Fig. 3), rarely
three-celled (Fig. 4), constricted between the cells and their colour
ranged from light to dark-brown, 38-56 µm long and 16-21 µm across.
The terminal cell was rounded sometimes with a pointed apex. One-celled
mesospores were not observed. The diameter of the stalk measured at the
point of attachment of the spore body was 7.4 µm (average made from 30
spores). Based on morphological characters described above, this rust
pathogen was identified as Puccinia lagenophorae (Weber et al.,
1998).
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Figure 3: Two-celled teliospores of P.
lagenophorae
(bar = 10 μm) |
Figure 4: Three-celled teliospores of
P. lagenophorae
(bar = 10 μm) |
The 5’end of the large ribosomal subunit (LSU) and the ITS region
were amplified using the primers NL1/NL4 and ITS4/ITS5 respectively and
the amplification procedures described by Maier et al. (2003) and
Weber et al. (2003). The ITS and LSU amplicons were sequenced and
their sequences deposited in GenBank (accession numbers AY808060 and
AY808061 respectively). The ITS sequence was identical to that of Puccinia
lagenophorae (AF468041). However, as this was the first sequence of
LSU submitted for this fungus no comparison was possible.
Puccinia lagenophorae was first discovered in Britain in 1961 on Senecio
spp. The rust originated from Australia and is now causing epidemics on Senecio
spp. in Europe. Other hosts affected in the UK are Calendula
officinalis, Pericallis hybrida and Bellis perennis
(Henderson, 2000), although natural infection of this fungus on the
latter host has been questioned (Weber et al., 1998). This rust
has never been recorded on Emilia spp. in the UK or in other
parts of the world. The only rust recorded so far on Emilia spp.
in the UK is Coleosporium tussilaginis (Henderson, 2000).
Acknowledgment
We would like to thank Andrew Halstead for drawing our attention to
this new disease in the garden.
References
Henderson DM, 2000. Checklist of the rust fungi of the British
Isles. British Mycological Society, pp 36.
Maier W, Begerow D, Weiß M, Oberwinkler F, 2003. Phylogeny of the
rust fungi: an approach using nuclear large subunit ribosomal DNA
sequences. Canadian Journal of Botany 81, 12-23.
Weber RWS, Webster J, Al-Gharabally DH, 1998. Puccinia distincta,
cause of the current daisy rust epidemic in Britain, in comparison with
other rusts recorded on daisies, P. obscura and P.
lagenophorae. Mycological Research 102, 1227-1232.
Weber RWS, Webster J, Engel G, 2003. Phylogenetic analysis of Puccinia
distincta and P. lagenophorae, two closely related rust fungi
causing epidemics on Asteraceae in Europe. Mycological
Research 107, 15-24.
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