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Olivea tectonae, leaf rust of teak, occurs in Cuba M. Pérez, M.O. López and O. Martí Plant Health Institute,
110st between 5th Ave. and 5th B. Playa,
Havana, Accepted for publication 17/06/08 Teak is planted widely and is commonly used in Cuba for construction. In November 2006, we found a rust on trees in Güira de Melena, Perico and Ranchuelo municipalities of Havana , Matanzas and Villa Clara provinces respectively. First symptoms occur on leaves of plants of all ages, and begin with small regular and irregular brown to grey necrotic areas (Fig. 1) that cover the upper leaf surface (Fig. 2). Later the leaves dry up and appear burned (Fig. 3), with severe to complete defoliation (Fig. 4) of young trees in 20-30 days from symptom onset. Tree growth is reduced. Uredinia
were powdery,
orange, sub-epidermal at first, later erumpent. Paraphyses
were cylindrical, curved and swollen at the apex, 3-5 µm thick. Urediniospores
were ovoid, orange-yellow, echinulate, 20–23 x 16.‑22 µm, with germ
pores present and cell walls 2–5 µm thick. Teliospores
were absent (Fig. 5). The symptoms and fungus characteristics agree
with the description by Mulder and Gibson
(1973)
of Olivia tectonae, teak leaf rust. O.
tectonae was restricted to Asia for over a 100 years until it was found in
Panama in 2003, later Costa Rica (Arguedas 2004), Mexico and Ecuador (EPPO,
2005). O. tectonae has been confirmed from
Australia
(Daly et
al. 2006). This is the first report of teak leaf rust caused by O.
tectonae in
Cuba
, evidence
that the fungus is moving rapidly throughout the References Arguedas M, 2004. La roya de la teca Olivea tectonae (Rac.): consideraciones sobre su presencia en Panamá y Costa Rica. KURU: Revista Forestal (Costa Rica) 1, 1-6. Daly AM, Shivas RG, Pegg GS, Mackie AE, 2006.
First record of teak leaf rust (Olivea tectonae) in EPPO, 2005. Reporting Service No. 8. http://archives.eppo.org/EPPOReporting/2005/Rse-0508.pdf (accessed 7 April 2008). Mulder JL, Gibson IAS, 1973. Olivea tectonae. CMI Descriptions of Pathogenic Fungi and Bacteria, No. 365. Kew, UK: Commonwealth Mycological Institute. |