Blueberry blight caused by Bipolaris
cynodontis in Argentina M.N. Sisterna1*,
B.A.Pérez2, M. Divo de Sesar3and E.R. Wright3
1 CIC-CIDEFI, Facultad de Ciencias Agrarias y Forestales,
60 y 119, 1900, La Plata (UNLP)
2 INTA-IMYZA, Castelar, Buenos Aires
3 Facultad de Agronomía, Universidad de Buenos Aires
*mnsisterna@gmail.com
Accepted for publication 27/06/08 Blueberry (Vaccinium
corymbosum) production in Argentina has grown remarkably in the last eight
years due to the high demand worldwide in the off-season fresh market. Since
it is a new crop in Argentina, diseases are just starting to become problematic
for farmers. Surveys have been conducted since 2000 to detect new pathogenic
associations and to evaluate their distribution, incidence and severity in
different blueberry varieties and localities. Blueberry plants cv.
Duke with dieback, and bud and branch blight, were observed in the winter
of 2006 in La Plata, Buenos Aires province. Diseased pieces were washed with
running water, disinfected with 2% sodium hypochlorite, then 70% alcohol,
rinsed in sterile distilled water, plated on carrot agar (CA), and incubated
for 12 h under near UV light until colony maturation. Under optic microscopy,
conidia that were single, fusiform, straight or slightly curved, 30-50 (46.7)
x 11-22 (18.4) μm, 3-7 distoseptate (mostly 5-6), pale to mid-golden brown,
with bipolar germination, were observed (Fig. 1). Based on these characteristics,
the fungus was identified as Bipolaris cynodontis (Marig.) Shoemaker
(Sivanesan, 1987). The strain was deposited in the culture collection
of the Instituto de Micología Spegazzini (La Plata, Buenos Aires, Argentina),
No. 1018.

Figure 1: Bipolaris cynodontis conidiophores and conidia
Pathogenicity tests were carried out using two-month-old blueberry
plants cv. O’Neal inoculated with a suspension containing 106
conidia/ml. Sterile distilled water was sprayed on controls. Plants were maintained
in a humidity chamber at 20°C ± 2°C for 48 h, and incubated under 12 h light
until symptoms developed. The fungus was recovered from inoculated plants
that displayed similar symptoms to those observed in the field. Control plants
did not show symptoms. B. cynodontis has been isolated from Cynodon,
other grasses, apple, pine, Ipomoea, and Lycopersicon and
is seed-borne on Agropyron, Hordeum and Triticum (Sivanesan,
1987). In Argentina, this fungus has been found on leaves of Bromus
unioloides (Sisterna & Wolcan, 1989) and Cynodon dactylon (Sisterna
& Dal Bello, 1991-1992) and on cereal seeds (Sisterna, 1987). This is the
first report of Bipolaris cynodontis on blueberry in Argentina.
References Sisterna MN, 1987. Especies graminícolas
de los géneros Drechslera, Bipolaris y Exserohilum en la Argentina.
Turrialba 37, 45-51. Sisterna MN, Wolcan SM, 1989.
.Bipolaris cynodontis Marig. sobre cebadilla criolla (Bromus unioloides)
en la Argentina. Revista de la Facultad de Agronomía, U.N.L.P. 6,
89. Sisterna MN, Dal Bello GM, 1991-1992. Cynodon dactylon (L.)
Pers.: host of Bipolaris cynodontis (Marig.) Shoem. en Argentina.
Revista Agronómica del Noroeste Argentino 26, 145-147.
Sivanesan A. 1987. Graminicolous species of Bipolaris, Curvularia,
Drechslera, Exserohilum and their teleomorphs. Mycological
Papers 158, 1-261. |