Pomegranate fruit rot caused by
Coniella granati confirmed in Greece
G.T. Tziros* and K.
Tzavella-Klonari
Aristotle University of
Thessaloniki, Faculty of Agriculture, Plant Pathology Laboratory, P.O.B. 269,
541 24, Thessaloniki, Greece
*gtziros@yahoo.gr
Accepted for publication 03/09/07
Pomegranate (Punica granatum)
is a rapidly developing crop grown for its fruits all over Greece. In autumn
2006 a fruit rot was observed in six pomegranate orchards in the area of Serres
(Northern Greece, Central Macedonia). Symptoms first appeared as small circular
spots on the fruits which later increased in size and developed into expanded
brown lesions. Affected fruits rotted completely during storage causing yield
losses of up to 50%. Abundant pycnidia covered the rind of rotted fruits (Fig.
1).
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Figure 1:
Rotted pomegranate fruit
covered by
pycnidia of Coniella granati |
Figure 2:
Pycnidium and conidia of
Coniella granati (Bar= 12.5µm) |
Isolations made on potato dextrose agar (PDA) gave rise to white mycelium
colonies that formed large numbers of pycnidia after incubation at 25°
C for 7 days. The fungus
was identified as
Coniella granati (Hebert
& Clayton, 1963; Sutton, 1969) based on morphological characteristics. Pycnidia
were globose, brownish in colour, with thin membraneous pseudoparenchymatic
walls 49- 112 µm
in diameter. Conidia were hyaline, one-celled, elongate, straight or slightly
curved, 12-18 x 25 µm
(mean 13.1 x 3.4 µm)
(Fig. 2). One isolate was deposited at the Benaki Phytopathological Institute
Culture Collection as BPIC 2593.
Pathogenicity tests were conducted
by placing 5 mm diameter mycelial plugs on to scalpel wounds made in the surface
of sterilized fruits. The tests were repeated three times. Inoculated fruits
were placed in plastic bags and kept at 25° C for 10 days. Wounded fruits
without mycelial inoculum were kept as controls. After 10 days
all inoculated plants developed
symptoms similar to those seen in the
field.
The pathogen was reisolated from
the fruit.
Coniella granati
is a widespread pathogen of P. granatum recorded in Brazil, Cyprus,
Italy, Korea, North Carolina, The Netherlands, Pakistan (Farr et al.
2007) and Turkey (Yildiz & Karaca, 1973), but to our knowledge this is the first
report of this pathogen causing fruit rot of pomegranate in Greece.
References
Farr DF,
Rossman AY, Palm ME, McGray EB, 2007. Fungal Databases, Systematic Botany &
Mycology Laboratory, USDA: ARS. Retrieved June 26, 2007, from http:
//nt.ars-grin.gov/fungal databases/.
Hebert TT, Clayton CN, 1963.
Pomegranate fruit rot caused by Coniella granati. Plant Disease
Reporter 47, 222-223.
Sutton BC, 1969. Type studies of
Coniella, Anthasthoopa and Cyclodomella. Canadian Journal
of Botany 47, 603-608.
Yildiz M, Karaca I, 1973. Türkiyede
Coniella granati nin meydana getirdigi nar meyve çürüklügü .
E.Ü. Ziraat Fakültesi Dergisi 10
(2), 315 325.
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