|
Occurrence and distribution of citrus leprosis virus (CiLV-C) in Honduras, Central America
First report of Rhizoctonia solani causing leaf spot of Adhatoda
vasica
O.P.
Verma*, N. Singh and P. Sharma
Alfa
Beta Technical Solutions, 61/130 Pratap Nagar RHB, Sanganer, Jaipur-302033,
India
*brijesh@alfabts.com Accepted for publication 14/11/06
Adhatoda vasica
(syn. Justicia adhatoda), popularly known in India as malabar nut, is an
important medicinal plant in traditional as well as modern systems of
medicines. The leaves are used, either alone or in combination with other
drugs, for preparation of expectorants (Singh et al., 1996; Jain &
DeFilipps, 1991).
 |
 |
Figure 1:
Symptoms of Rhizoctonia
leaf spot on Adhatoda vasica leaf |
Figure 2:
Close-up view of Rhizoctonia leaf spot
on Adhatoda vasica leaf
|
During October-November 2005, a leaf spot disease was found in A.
vasica. The disease was present on all A. vasica plantations located
in the foothills on the outskirts of Jaipur, covering an area of 8–10 km2.
The disease was present on leaves of all ages but was more severe on older
(lower) leaves. Symptoms start as minute, round, light brown spots. Within
8-10 days the spots grow and acquire a round to irregular shape. Some spots
coalesce. Fully developed spots were water soaked, dark brown to blackish,
scattered all over the leaf lamina. Margins of the spots were diffuse and each
spot had a light coloured dot in the centre. The spots were equally visible on
lower and upper leaf surfaces. Severe infection resulted in defoliation.
Repeated isolations from infected leaves yielded a similar fungal growth on
Potato Dextrose Agar. Five-day-old cultures (26
± 1°C) produced profuse mycelium and dirty
white sclerotia. Older hyphae were abundantly branched and dark brown. Lateral
mycelium branches were constricted at the point of origin. Mature sclerotia
were brown to black and highly variable in shape and size. Based on the
cultural characters and morphology of mycelium and sclerotia, the fungus was
identified as Rhizoctonia solani. The identity of the fungus was
confirmed by Mycology Section, Agharkar Research Institute, Pune, India.
For
pathogenicity testing, healthy leaves of potted plants of A. vasica were
spray-inoculated with aqueous suspension of mycelium and sclerotia taken from
7-day-old culture on PDA. Inoculated plants, vis-à-vis water-sprayed
control plants were covered with polythene bags for 36 hours. Typical leaf spot
symptoms started developing after 10 days. The fungus was successfully
reisolated of from artificially developed symptoms.
Although R. solani is known to cause foliar diseases of many plants
including medicinal plants (Janardhanan, 2002), this is the first report of
R. solani causing leaf spot of A. vasica in India and elsewhere. The
field symptoms show that the disease is able to reduce A. vasica bio-mass
substantially. Rhizoctonia leaf spot constitutes a potential threat to the
exploitation of an important medicinal plant species.
References Jain
SK, DeFilipps RA, 1991. Medicinal Plants of India, Vol. 1. Michigan, USA:
Reference Publications Inc.
Janardhanan KK, 2002. Diseases of Major Medicinal Plants. Delhi, India:
Daya Publishing House.
Singh U, Wadhwani AM, Johri BM, 1996. Dictionary of Economic Plants of India.
New Delhi, India: ICAR.
|