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Occurrence and distribution of citrus leprosis virus (CiLV-C) in Honduras, Central America
First report of rust disease
caused by Puccinia
elymi
on
Leymus chinensis
in
China
Z. Li1,2,
X. Wang1,2 and D. L. Wang1,2*
1 Institute
of Grassland Science,
Northeast Normal
University, Changchun,
130024, P.R. China
2 Key
Laboratory of Vegetation Ecology, Ministry of Education, Changchun, 130024, P.R.
China
*wangd@nenu.edu.cn
Accepted for publication 08/03/07
Leymus
chinensis
(=Aneurolepidium
chinense,
Gramineae) is an important perennial grass
species widely distributed in the eastern part of the Eurasian grassland.
It
has become a dominant species in the grass steppe of northeastern China.
During a plant disease survey in Baicheng City, Jilin province of China, in
early summer 2005, symptoms of rust disease were observed on the leaves of
L.
chinensis
(Fig. 1).
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Figure 1:
Uredinia on the upper
surface of leaves
of
Leymus chinensis |
Figure 2:
Uredospores
of Puccinia elymi,
Bar = 20 µm |
The
severity of the disease attack had notably increased by mid-August. Numerous
uredinia occurred, mostly on the upper leaf surfaces. Initially scattered, they
later occurred at much higher densities, often confluent, cinnamon-brown, and
surrounded by the ruptured epidermis. The uredospores were ellipsoid, obovoid,
or broadly ellipsoid, yellowish to golden, and
measured 20-30×18-25 µm, with a thick
wall up to 2-4 µm thick and 8-10 scattered germ pores (Fig. 2).
Production of the teliospores was observed during late summer and autumn.
Numerous telia occurred in October. Telia mostly appeared on the lower surface
of leaves and sheaths. They were scattered or arranged in lines, often
confluent, covered by a blackish epidermis (Fig. 3). The striking appearance of
the chestnut-brown multiseptate teliospores (2 to 4-celled, mostly 3-celled)
rendered this rust easily recognisable. The teliospores measured 45-90×10-18
µm,
with walls 1.5 µm thick at the sides and
3-7 µm at the apex (Fig. 4). Based on the morphological characters described
above, this rust pathogen was identified as Puccinia elymi (Wilson &
Henderson, 1966).
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Figure 3:
Telia on the lower surface of leaves
of
Leymus chinensis |
Figure 4:
Teliospores
of Puccinia elymi,
Bar = 30 µm
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P.
elymi
was first
described on
Elymus arenarius
from
Belgium in 1851 (Cummins,
1971).
It has a wide distribution in Europe and Asia from Great Britain to China
(Wilson & Henderson, 1966;
Cummins, 1971; Zhuang et al., 1998).
The aecia occur on Thalictrum of Ranunculaceae, and the uredinia and
telia have been recorded frequently on Elymus spp. (Cummins, 1971).
Other hosts affected in
China are Elymus sibiricus, Roegneria sinica var. media,
R. turczaninovii and Poa sp. (Zhuang
et al., 1998).
This rust,
however, has never been recorded on
L. chinensis
in
China or in other parts of the world. The rust species recorded so far on
L. chinensis
in
China are Puccinia coronata, P. rangiferina, P.
recondita and P. striiformis (Nan & Li, 1994).
Acknowledgements
Sincere gratitude to
Prof. Dr J. Y. Zhuang for his valuable comments and to
the project sponsored by SRF
for ROCS, SEM.
References
Cummins GB, 1971.
The Rust Fungi of Cereals, Grasses and Bamboos. New York: Springer-Verlag,
288.
Nan ZB, Li CJ, 1994.
Fungal diseases of pasture plants recorded in China – a check list.
Pratacultural Science Vol. 11, Supplement 64
(in Chinese with English summary).
Wilson M, Henderson DM, 1966.
British Rust Fungi. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 256-258.
Zhuang JY, Wei SX, Wang YC, 1998.
Flora Fungorum Sinicorun Vol. 10. Uredinales І. Science Press, 73-74 (in
Chinese).
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