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First Report of the Pitch Canker Fungus (Fusarium circinatum) in the
Sierra Nevada of California. D. R. Vogler, Institute of Forest Genetics,
USDA, Forest Service, PSW Research Station, Davis, CA 95616;
T. R. Gordon, B. J. Aegerter, and S. C. Kirkpatrick, Department of Plant
Pathology, University of California, Davis 95616; G. A. Lunak, North Sierra Tree
Improvement Association (NSTIA), Stirling City, CA 95978; P. Stover, Genetic
Resources Program, USDA, Forest Service, Camino, CA 95709; and P. Violett,
NSTIA, Strawberry Valley, CA 95981. Plant Dis. 88:772, 2004; published on-line
as D-2004-0426-01N, 2004. Accepted for publication 14 April 2004.
The pitch canker fungus, Fusarium circinatum (teleomorph Gibberella
circinata), was isolated from a branch originating from rootstock of a
Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii) graft in a breeding orchard at
1,000-m elevation in El Dorado County, California. We visited the orchard after
the New Zealand Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry reported in November 2003
that a Douglas-fir scion (branch cutting) shipped from there in January—and
subsequently grafted and held in a quarantine facility near Christchurch—was
infected with the pitch canker fungus. We took samples throughout the orchard of
any branches that appeared unhealthy. In addition, asymptomatic branches from
the tree alleged to be the source of the New Zealand infestation were collected
to assay for propagules of F. circinatum. Wash water from these branches
was negative for the pathogen. Likewise, F. circinatum was not recovered
from water washings of 20 branches collected randomly throughout the orchard.
Fifteen branch samples collected from symptomatic Douglas-fir grafts were
cultured on water agar and only one yielded a colony with an appearance
consistent with F. circinatum. A single spore subculture of this isolate
was confirmed as F. circinatum on the basis of colony morphology and the
structure of the microconidiophores (1). The virulence of this isolate was
evaluated by inoculating susceptible 2-year-old Monterey pine (Pinus radiata)
seedlings with a toothpick to wound the main stem and insert potato dextrose
agar colonized by the fungus. Twenty-four days later, pitching and yellow
needles were evident at the site of inoculation, and removal of the bark
revealed resin-soaked and discolored tissue. Concurrent with the pathogenicity
test described above, a culture of the putative F. circinatum isolated in
New Zealand was inoculated into Monterey pines with an identical outcome. The
fungus was reisolated from lesions from both sets of inoculations and confirmed
as F. circinatum based on morphological criteria. Isolates GL285 and
GL286 are available from T. R. Gordon upon request. Prior to its discovery in
the Sierra Nevada, pitch canker in California was known only from counties on or
near the coast. Our report indicates the pathogen can survive and infect trees
110 km east of the previous most-inland site of infestation. It remains to be
seen how extensively pitch canker will develop in the Sierra Nevada. Douglas-fir
is only moderately susceptible to F. circinatum, which has not been
observed to cause significant damage to this species. On the other hand,
low-elevation Sierra Nevada pines including P. sabiniana, P. coulteri,
and P. ponderosa are substantially more susceptible than are Douglas-fir
in greenhouse tests (2).
References: (1) T. R. Gordon et al. Mycol. Res. 100:850, 1996. (2) T. R.
Gordon et al. Plant Dis. 85:1128, 2001.
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