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Corynespora cassiicola causing leaf spots
on Coleus barbatus
R.C. Fernandes and R.W. Barreto*
Departamento de Fitopatologia, Universidade Federal de Viçosa,
Viçosa, MG, 36571-000, Brazil
*rbarreto@ufv.br
Accepted for publication 07/03/03
Coleus barbatus Benth (local name falso-boldo) is a tropical
aromatic shrub of the Lamiaceae. It is widely used as a medicine against
liver and digestion ailments in Brazil. Little attention has been given
to plant diseases affecting medicinal plants in Brazil. Samples of C.
barbatus from two separate locations at Viçosa (state of Minas
Gerais, Brazil) showing seemingly undescribed leaf spots were collected
in February and June of 2001.
Lesions were initially brown and punctiform becoming elliptic,
subcircular to irregular and pale brown. They were well delimited with a
dark brown rim (up to 5 mm in diameter) (Fig. 1), distributed on the
lamina, sometimes coalescing and leading to extensive necrosis and
yellowing. A dematiaceous fungus was consistently found sporulating on
the centre of those lesions.
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Figure 1. C. barbatus plants showing leaf-spot symptoms.
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Figure 2. Corynespora cassiicola – slide culture of
isolate from C. barbatus showing a conidiophore arising
from a hyphae and a conidial chain.
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The fungus had conidiophores which were amphigenous, cylindrical,
straight to slightly curved, unbranched, 101.0-227.5 x 6.5-9.5 µm,
4-12 septate, smooth and pale brown. Conidia were isolated or forming
acropetal chains, fusiform to subcylindrical, 57.0-180.0 x 12.5-16.0 µm, with a rounded apex and truncate base, 5-12 septate, yellowish brown
to subhyaline and smooth (Fig. 2). This corresponds well with features
described by Ellis (1971) for Corynespora cassiicola (Berk. & Curt.)
Wei. The specimens were deposited in the herbarium at the Universidade
Federal de Viçosa as VIC 26503 and VIC 26504.
The fungus was isolated on PDA where it sporulated well. Six healthy
C. barbatus plants were brush-inoculated with a Tween 20 suspension
(0.05%) containing 4.2 x 104 conidia of C. cassiicola per ml.
Two additional plants were brushed only with Tween suspension. After
inoculation the plants were left for 48 hours in a dew chamber at 25°C.
Necrotic areas appeared on leaves of inoculated plants in less than 24
hours. Parts of the tissue developed leaf spots with the same appearance
as those seen in the field whereas other parts of inoculated leaves
developed an extensive blight (Fig. 3). This suggests that a toxin was
present in the suspension as observed in the studies carried out for C.
cassiicola f. sp. lantanae (Pereira et al. 2002).

Figure 3. Inoculated (left) and non-inoculated (right) C. barbatus
plants.
No record of this disease was found in the main Brazilian list of
fungi on plants (Mendes et al. 1998) or in the world literature.
Therefore this represents the first record of this disease. C.
cassiicola ‘is a common and cosmopolitan species, specially abundant
in the tropics, with a wide range of host plants’ (Ellis, 1971) and
this represents another addition to its host range.
References
Ellis MG, 1971. Dematiaceous Hyphomycetes. Kew, UK: CABI.
Mendes MAS, Silva VL, Dianses JC, Ferreira MASV, Santos CEN, Gomes
Neto E, Urben AF, Castro C, 1998. Fungos em Plantas no Brasil.
Brasília: Embrapa.
Pereira JMP, Barreto RW, Ellison CA, Maffia
LA, (In Press). Corynespora cassiicola f. sp. lantanae:
a potential biocontrol agent for Lantana camara from Brazil. Biological
Control 2002.
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