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First report of Fusarium sporotrichioides causing root rot of Erigeron breviscapus in China

J.H. Zhou1*, B. Du1, C.Q. Liu2, S.C. Yang3, Y.Y. Wang1 and Y.Y. Zhu1

1 The Key Laboratory of Agricultural Biodiversity for Plant Disease Management of the Educational Ministry, Yunnan Agricultural University, 650201 Kunming, Yunnan, P.R. China
2 College of Biological Sciences and Biotechnology, Beijing Forestry University, 100083 Beijing, P.R. China
3 College of Agronomy and Biotechnology, Yunnan Agricultural University, 650201 Kunming, Yunnan, P.R. China

*zhoujh416@163.com

Accepted for publication 26/03/06

In China, Erigeron breviscapus is used extensively as a traditional herbal drug to improve brain circulation and enhance cerebral function. In August and September of 2005, root rot of E. breviscapus was observed in greenhouses in Mile County, Yunnan province of China. The initial symptoms of brown necrosis began in lateral roots, then advanced to the base of the stems. Plants withered, dried and died within 1-2 weeks (Fig. 1 & 2). The disease spread rapidly to neighbouring plants through irrigation water.

Tissue fragments taken from the diseased roots, at the edge of necrotic areas, were surface sterilised, transferred to potato dextrose agar and incubated at 27°C in the dark. Cultures from single-spore isolates formed characteristic pale pink colonies. Abundant single-celled microconidia and some macroconidia with 2 to 3 partitions (39-51 x 4-5 µm) were observed. Abundant chlamydospores were formed on water agar. The fungus was identified as Fusarium sporotrichioides based on its micro-morphology and cultural features (Booth, 1977; Nelson et al., 1983). For pathogenicity testing, a conidial suspension (5 x 106 conidia per ml) was dropped onto wounded roots of 5-month-old E. breviscapus plants (10 ml per plant) in the field. Control plants were treated with water. The inoculated plants and controls were planted in the same field and observed daily for symptom development. All the inoculated plants showed root rot 14 days after inoculation. None of the wounded control plants developed symptoms. F. sporotrichioides was successfully re-isolated from all the inoculated plants, thus fulfilling Koch’s postulates.

No records on F. sporotrichioides causing root rot of E. breviscapus have been found. To our knowledge, this is the first report of this disease in the world.

Acknowledgements

This research was financed by a grant from the National Key Technologies R&D Program of China (2004BA721A34).


References

Booth C, 1977. The Genus Fusarium. Kew, UK: Commonwealth Mycological Institute.

Nelson PE, Tousson TA, Marasas WFO, 1983. Fusarium species. An Illustrated Manual for Identification. Pennsylvania, USA: The Pennsylvania State University Press.

The British Society for Plant Pathology