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First report of false smut disease caused by Graphiola
phoenicis on date palm trees in Qatar
E.H. Abbas* and A.S. Abdulla
Department of Agricultural Development, Plant Protection Section,
Ministry of Municipal Affairs and Agriculture, P.O. Box 1966 Doha, Qatar
*al_turaihi@yahoo.com
Accepted for publication 14/06/04
Date palm (Phoenix dactylifera) is the most important fruit
tree in the State of Qatar and is widely planted in rural areas. In
urban areas it is a common ornamental and shade plant, grown in parks
and gardens and alongside roads. During spring and summer of 2001 and
2002, several date palm trees located in Al Ka’ban area (north Qatar)
showed symptoms typical of false smut disease. The fungus results in
sub-epidermal spots on both sides of the pinnae (leaflets) and on the
rachis, with small, black sori developing in abundance on old fronds.
Once the spores have disseminated, only the rough black craters of the
sori remain. More severe infections and damage were observed in areas of
higher humidity especially in Al Mashrub, located in the northeast
coastal strip. Severe infection reduces tree growth and date production
through premature death of leaves.

Figure 1: Symptoms of false smut disease on date palm leaf
The sori were 1 to 3mm in diameter, and occurred on both sides of the
pinnae, typically more abundant in the apical regions. These
superficially resemble a scale insect or mealy bug infestation but
closer examination revealed the exudation of powdery yellow spores on
whitish filaments. The spores observed were spherical to ellipsoidal,
3-6 µm in diameter and had a thick, smooth hyaline wall. The fungus was
identified as Graphiola phoenicis (Djerbi, 1983), commonly known
as false smut disease. It is also known as graphiola leaf spot and palm
leaf pustule.
Disease attacks were most common on seven to ten year-old palm trees
and most evident on the older fronds. The disease has now spread to date
palm groves throughout the country, but more quickly where trees are
planted at higher densities (4-5 m spacing). False smut disease is now
affecting individual date palm trees in the north, central and south
areas of Qatar.
False smut disease has previously been recorded on P. dactylifera
in India, Egypt and Brazil (CAB International, 2003), Libya (Edongali,
1996) and Kenya (Kung’u & Boa, 1997). This is the first report of Graphiola
phoenicis occurring on date palm trees in the State of Qatar.
References
CAB International, 2003. Crop Protection Compendium.
Wallingford, UK: CABI Publishing.
Djerbi M, 1983. Diseases of the date palm (Phoenix dactylifera).
Regional Project for Palm & Dates Research Centre in the Near East
& North Africa. Baghdad, Iraq: FAO.
Edongali EA, 1996. Diseases of date palms (Phoenix dactylifera)
of Libya. Arab Journal of Plant Protection 14, 41-43
Kung'u J, Boa E, 1997. Kenya Checklist of Fungi and Bacteria on
Plants and other Substrates. Egham, UK: International Mycological
Institute. 97 pp
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