The American Phytopathological Society (APS) is a non-profit, professional, scientific organization dedicated to the study and control of plant diseases.
Copyright 1994-2008
The American Phytopathological Society
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First Report on White Smut of Gaillardia × grandiflora Caused by Entyloma
polysporum in Virginia. C. X. Hong and T. J. Banko, Virginia Polytechnic
Institute and State University, Hampton Roads Agricultural Research and
Extension Center, Virginia Beach, VA 23455. Plant Dis. 87:313, 2003; published
on-line as D-2003-0114-01N, 2003. Accepted for publication 6 January 2003.
Disease samples of Gaillardia × grandiflora cvs. Goblin and
Baby Cole were received at the Hampton Roads Agricultural Research and Extension
Center in Virginia Beach in early April 2002. Samples were from a nursery in
eastern Virginia, and most diseased plants had several to more than a dozen,
round, flat, white to tan spots with indistinct margins up to 1 cm in diameter
on their leaves. The spots later turned brown and necrotic, followed by necrosis
of the entire leaf. Leaves of ‘Baby Cole’ were beginning to wilt and were
more spotted than those of ‘Goblin’. Fungal fruiting bodies were not
observed on the surface of diseased leaves. However, microscopic examination of
internal leaf tissues revealed masses of round, double-walled, pale
green-to-yellow spores approximately 12 µm in diameter and typical of the
ustilospores of Entyloma polysporum (2,3). Inoculum for pathogenicity
tests was prepared by blending 10 diseased leaves in 200 ml of sterile distilled
water (SDW) for 2 min in a blender at low speed. The spore suspension was
adjusted to 5 × 10(^5) spores per ml with SDW. Healthy ‘Goblin’ gaillardia
plants were obtained from a nursery where smut symptoms had never been seen.
Four plants in one-gallon containers were inoculated by spraying them to runoff
with the spore suspension. Four control plants were sprayed with SDW only. All
plants were maintained in a greenhouse (15 to 35°C) and covered with a clean
polyethylene plastic sheet overnight (14 h) to maintain high humidity and
separated to avoid potential cross contamination. Inoculated and uninoculated
plants were hand-watered separately, with application of water to the foliage to
enhance spread of the disease. Typical white smut symptoms were observed on
inoculated plants 2 weeks after inoculation, and numerous spores of E.
polysporum were observed in the diseased tissues. No disease symptoms were
seen on control plants. White smut has been reported on gaillardia in a few
other states (1), but to our knowledge, this is the first report of the disease
on gaillardia in Virginia. Growers at the affected nursery reported observing
white smut symptoms on gaillardia in previous years, but in the spring of 2002,
almost the entire gaillardia crop was destroyed. The disease has not been seen
on gaillardia in any other nurseries, but it could have significant impact on
production if it spreads.
References: (1) D. F. Farr et al. Fungi on Plants and Plant Products in
the United States. The American Phytopathological Society, St. Paul, MN, 1989.
(2) W. Fischer. Manual of the North American Smut Fungi. Ronald Press, New York,
1953. (3) D. B. O. Savile. Can. J. Res. 25(C):109, 1947.
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