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Shade tree hosts affected by BLS
Table 1. Shade tree hosts affected by BLS.
| Scientific name |
Common name |
| Acer sp. |
|
| A. rubrum |
Red maple |
| A. negundo |
Boxelder |
| A. saccharum |
Sugar maple |
| Cornus florida |
Flowering dogwood |
| Celtis occidentalis |
Hackberry |
| Liquidambar stryraciflua |
Sweet gum |
| Morus alba |
White mulberry |
| Platanus sp. |
|
| P. occidentalis |
American sycamore |
| P. x acerifolia |
London plane |
| Quercus sp. |
|
| Q. velutina |
Black oak |
| Q. incana |
Bluejack oak |
| Q. macrocarpa |
Bur oak |
| Q. prinus |
Chestnut oak |
| Q. laurifolia |
Laurel oak |
| Q. virginiana |
Live oak |
| Q. rubra |
Northern red oak |
| Q. palustris |
Pin oak |
| Q. stellata |
Post oak |
| Q. coccinea |
Scarlet oak |
| Q. imbricaria |
Shingle oak |
| Q. shumardii |
Shumard oak |
| Q. falcata |
Southern red oak |
| Q. bicolor |
Swamp white oak |
| Q. laevis |
Turkey oak |
| Q. nigra |
Water oak |
| Q. alba |
White oak |
| Q. phellos |
Willow oak |
| Ulmus americana |
American elm |
Table 2. Some of the economically important diseases caused by
Xylella
fastidiosa characterized by the primary symptom expressed.
| Leaf scorch |
Almond leaf scorch
(Prunus amygdalus) |
| Bacterial leaf scorch of
shade trees |
| Coffee leaf scorch
(Coffea arabica) |
| Oleander leaf scorch
(Nerium oleander) |
| Pear leaf scorch (Pyrus
pyrifolia) |
| Pecan leaf scorch (Carya
illinoinensis) |
| Pierce’s disease of
grapevine (Vitis spp.) |
| Plum leaf scald (Prunus
domestica, P. salicina) |
| Stunt |
Alfalfa dwarf (Medicago
sativa) |
| Citrus variegated
chlorosis (Citrus spp.) |
| Phony peach disease
(Prunus persica) |
| Periwinkle wilt (Catharanthus roseus) |
Table 3. Some alternative hosts of Xylella fastidiosa.1
| Scientific name |
Common name |
| Aesculus x hybrid |
Buckeye |
| Ampelopsis
arborea |
Peppervine |
| Ampelopsis
brevipedunculata |
Porcelain berry |
| Artemisia spp. |
Mugwort |
| Baccharis
halimifolia |
Eastern baccharis |
| Callicarpa
americana |
American beautyberry |
| Celastrus
orbiculata |
Oriental bittersweet |
| Cynodon dactylon |
Bermuda grass |
| Fagus crenata |
Japanese beech bonsai |
| Fragaria californica |
Wild strawberry |
| Hedera helix |
English ivy |
| Montia linearis |
Miner’s lettuce |
| Parthenocissus
quinquefolia |
Virginia creeper |
| Parthenocissus
tricuspidata |
Boston ivy |
| Paspalum
dilatatum |
Dallis grass |
| Rhus sp. |
Sumac |
| Rubus procerus |
Blackberry |
| Sambucus
canadensis |
American elder |
| Solidago fistulosa |
Goldenrod |
| Sorghum
halapense |
Johnson grass |
| Trifolium repens var. latum |
Landino clover |
| Vitis sp. |
Wild grape |
For a more complete list of alternative hosts, refer to the Xylella fastidiosa web site: http://www.cnr.berkeley.edu/xylella/index.html.
Table 4. Methods used to detect Xylella fastidiosa1.
| Technique |
Sensitivity2
(number of bacterial cells)
|
Cost and labor |
| Culture from xylem fluid on selective media |
1000 |
Low |
| ELISA3 |
100,000 |
Med |
| PCR |
100 |
High |
| IC-PCR4 |
<100 |
High |
1Adapted from R. Jordan. 2002. In: Bacterial Leaf Scorch in Amenity trees: A Wide-Spread Problem of Economic Significance to the Urban Forest. Lashomb, J., A. Iskra, A.B. Gould, and G. Hamilton, eds. Vol. NA-TP-01-03: USFS
2Lowest approximate number of bacterial cells that the assay can detect.
3Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay
4Immunocapture-PCR
Table 5. Some known leafhopper vectors of Xylella fastidiosa.
| Host |
Insect vector |
| Citrus (Brazil) |
Acrogonia terminalis Dilobopterus costalimai Oncometopia fascialis Oncometopia nigricans |
| Grape |
Carneocephala fulgida Draeculacephala minerva Graphocephala atropunctata Homalodisca coagulata Oncometopia nigricans |
| Oleander |
Homalodisca coagulata Homalodisca lacerta |
| Peach, plum |
Graphocephala versuta Homalodisca coagulata Homalodisca insolita Oncometopia
orbona |
Table 6. Discovery of the identity of Xylella fastidiosa.
| 1890s |
California vine disease (now
known as Pierce’s disease) and phony peach disease observed and studied
in different parts of the United States; As Newton B. Pierce states, a
"minute microorganism" may be involved. |
1936 to
1959 |
Root graft, budding, and/or
insect transmission of Pierce’s disease, alfalfa dwarf, and elm scorch;
causal agent considered to be a virus. |
| 1971 |
Tetracycline antibiotic
suppresses development of Pierce’s disease; causal agent now considered
to be a mycoplasma-like organism (MLO). |
| 1973 |
Electron microscopy reveals
a "Rickettsia-like bacterium" in xylem tissues associated with Pierce’s
disease and phony peach disease; elm leaf scorch still considered to be
caused by a virus. |
| 1978 |
Selective media were defined
and a bacterium isolated from infected grapevine xylem tissues. |
| 1980 |
A xylem-limited bacterium
was associated with leaf scorch of elm. |
| 1987 |
Xylella fastidiosa described
as a new bacterial species. |
| 2004 |
New subspecies for Xylella
fastidiosa described based on pathogenicity, phylogenetic
characteristics, and DNA relatedness. |
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Copyright © 2007
by The American Phytopathological Society
|