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First Report of Black Sigatoka of Banana Caused by Mycosphaerella
fijiensis on Grand Bahama Island. R. C. Ploetz, University of Florida,
Department of Plant Pathology, IFAS, Tropical Research and Education Center,
18905 SW 280th Street, Homestead 33031-3314. Plant Dis. 88:772, 2004; published
on-line as D-2004-0519-01N, 2004. Accepted for publication 14 May 2004.
Black Sigatoka, which is also known as black leaf streak, is caused by Mycosphaerella
fijiensis (anamorph Pseudocercospora [formerly Paracercospora)
fijiensis]). It is the most important disease of commercially produced
banana (Musa spp.) and also has a major impact on production for local
consumption. Although the disease occurs throughout the humid tropics, it has
been reported in the Caribbean from only Cuba, Hispaniola, and Jamaica (1). In
February 2004, black Sigatoka was observed at two isolated and widely separated
sites on Grand Bahama island (26.7°N, 78.5°W and 26.7°N, 78°W) on cvs. Silk
AAB and Williams AAA, and a French Horn AAB plantain. Symptoms included wet,
dark brown streaks on the adaxial leaf surface, 1 to 2 × 10 mm, with chlorotic
haloes. Lesions enlarged to 5 × 20 mm and developed tan, necrotic centers;
large, blackened, water-soaked areas that resulted from the coalescence of
streaks were rare. The disease was confirmed by observing the following
characteristics of P. fijiensis in necrotic lesions on preserved leaf
specimens: simple conidiophores with a broadened base and one to several septa,
straight to variously bent cercosporoid conidia as much as 100 µm long with two
to several septa, and a conspicuously thickened scar at the base. Both plantings
were several years old and new planting material that could have been infested
with the pathogen had not been introduced since their establishment. Symptoms
were not severe and were distributed sporadically in both locations. The disease
was not observed at the only other large planting of banana on the island
(26.6°N, 78.6°W). The sporadic and apparently new infestations of two of three
banana plantings on the island suggest that the pathogen may have arrived
recently via natural means, possibly from neighboring Florida (2). In contrast,
black Sigatoka appears to have spread to other islands in the Caribbean via
infested propagation materials (1). To my knowledge, this is the first report of
black Sigatoka in the Bahamas, and with a previous report from Bhutan (1),
represents the northernmost spread of this important disease.
References: (1) J. Carlier et al. Pages 37-79 in: Diseases of Banana,
Abacá and Enset. D. R. Jones, ed. CABI Publishing. Wallingford, UK, 2000. (2)
R. C. Ploetz and X. Mourichon. Plant Dis. 83:300, 1999.
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