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First Report of Powdery Mildew Caused by Oidium Subgenus Pseudoidium
on Lonicera caprifolium in Italy. A. Garibaldi, D. Bertetti, and M.
L. Gullino, DIVAPRA and Centre of Competence for the Innovation in the
Agro-Environmental Sector (AGROINNOVA), Via Leonardo da Vinci 44, 10095
Grugliasco, Italy. Plant Dis. 88:1045, 2004; published on-line as
D-2004-0617-05N, 2004. Accepted for publication 27 May 2004.
Honeysuckle (Lonicera caprifolium L., family Caprifoliaceae) is a
climbing shrub used in gardens to cover walls and supports. During the summer of
2003, severe outbreaks of a previously unknown powdery mildew were observed on
this species in some gardens near Biella (northern Italy). The first symptoms
included extensive chlorosis on leaves, followed by the appearance of white
mycelium on the adaxial and abaxial leaf surfaces. As the disease progressed,
infected leaves turned yellow and died. Conidia were hyaline, ellipsoidal, and
measured 27.6 to 43.2 × 12.2 to 21.6 µm (average 35.7 × 17.6 µm). Foot cells
were cylindric and appressoria lobed. Fibrosin bodies were not present.
Cleistothecia were not observed during the growing season. The pathogen was
identified as Oidium subgenus Pseudoidium (2). The inoculation
procedure involved gently pressing diseased leaves onto leaves of healthy L.
caprifolium plants. Three plants of L. caprifolium were used
as replicates. Noninoculated plants served as control. Inoculated and
noninoculated plants were maintained in a garden at temperatures ranging from 15
to 25°C. After 10 days, typical symptoms of powdery mildew developed on
inoculated plants. Noninoculated plants did not show symptoms. To our knowledge,
this is the first report of powdery mildew on L. caprifolium in Italy.
The presence of powdery mildew on different species of Lonicera has been
reported in several countries, particularly, Microsphaera miurae U. Braun
on L. morowii A. Gray in Germany (1), M. lonicerae (DC.) Winter on
L. peryclimenum L. in England (3), and M. lonicerae-ramosissimae
on L. ramosissima Fr. & Sav. in Japan (4). The conidia of M. lonicerae
are smaller than those of the Oidium sp. reported on L. caprifolium.
Voucher specimens are available at DIVAPRA Collection at the University of
Torino.
References: (1) U. Braun. Mycotaxon 16:417, 1983. (2) U. Braun and S.
Takamatsu. Schlechtendalia 4:1, 2000. (3) J. Robbins. Cecidology 15:15, 2000.
(4) S. Tanda. Mycoscience 41:155, 2000.
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