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First report of Pseudomonas cichorii on Turmeric (Curcuma longa) in Brazil

A.C. Maringonia*, G.F. Theodorob, L.C. Minga, J.C. Cardosoa and C. Kurozawaa

a Department of Plant Production, Faculdade de Ciêncicas Agronômicas, São Paulo State University, P. O. Box 237, Botucatu - SP, Brazil
b EPAGRI/CEPAF, Fitossanitary Laboratory, 89801-970 Chapecó - SC, Brazil

*maringoni@fca.unesp.br

Accepted for publication 07/04/03

In 2002 a serious leaf blight was observed on turmeric plants grown for bulb multiplication in an experimental field at the Faculdade de Ciências Agronômicas, in Botucatu, State of São Paulo, Brazil. Affected leaves had irregular lesions that later enlarged and coalesced, resulting in part or whole leaf desiccation. Microscopic examination of tissue sections through lesion margins in sterile water revealed bacterial streaming. A mucoid, white bacterium was consistently isolated on King’s B medium (King et al. 1954). A single pure culture of the bacterium was examined and was found to be a Gram-negative, rod-shaped, aerobic, oxidase and catalase positive, fluorescent bacterium, that utilised asparagine and did not produce a hypersensitive reaction on tobacco leaves (Lelliot & Stead, 1987).

Figure 1. Symptoms of bacterial blight on leaves of turmeric from the field (left)
 and five days after inoculation (right) with Pseudomonas cichorii

The strain was analysed with the MicroLog2 System® (Biolog, Hayward, USA) and identified as Pseudomonas cichorii with similarity index of 84.2% and a probability of 100%. Leaves of eight week old plants of cv. Açafrão do Norte were inoculated using a toothpick dipped in a bacterial suspension (108 CFU per ml). Control plants were inoculated with water. Disease symptoms were observed on leaves five days after inoculation and the inoculated bacterium was re-isolated from lesions. Control plants remained disease free. Turmeric is not reported as host of P. cichorii (Bradbury, 1986). In Brazil this bacterium has previously been reported to cause disease on several cultivated plants (Marques et al., 1994) but this is the first report on turmeric.


References

Bradbury JF, 1986. Guide to Plant Pathogenic Bacteria. Kew, UK: CAB International Institute.

King EO, Ward MK, Raney DE, 1954. Two simple media for the demonstration of pyocyanin and fluorescein. Journal of Laboratory and Clinical Medicine 44, 301-7.

Lelliott, RA, Stead. DE, 1987. Methods for the Diagnosis of Bacterial Diseases of Plants. Oxford, UK: Blackwell Scientific Publications.

Marques AB, Robbs CF, Boitox LS, Parente PMG, 1994. Índice de Fitobacterioses Assinaladas no Brasil. Brasília: Empresa Brasileira de Pesquisa Agropecuária.

The British Society for Plant Pathology