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First Report of Oleander Leaf Scorch Caused by Xylella fastidiosa in
Texas. Q. Huang, Floral and Nursery Plants Research Unit, U.S. National
Arboretum, USDA, ARS, Beltsville, MD 20705; R. H. Brlansky, University of
Florida, Citrus Research Center, Lake Alfred 33850; L. Barnes, Texas A&M
University, College Station 77845; and W. Li and J. S Hartung, Fruit Laboratory,
USDA, ARS, Beltsville, MD 20705. Plant Dis. 88:1049, 2004; published on-line as
D-2004-0624-03N, 2004. Accepted for publication 11 June 2004.
Bacterial leaf scorch caused by Xylella fastidiosa has been reported on
oleander in California (3) and Florida (4). In June 2002, leaf scorch symptoms
including chlorotic mottling of leaves, necrosis on leaf tips or whole leaves,
defoliation, and shortened internodes were observed in oleander plants at
various locations in Texas, including Galveston, Harlingen, Austin, San Antonio,
and El Campo. The symptomatic varieties Calypso, Commandant Barthelemy, Lane
Taylor Sealy, Little Red, Mrs. George Roeding, Mrs. Runge, Scarlet Beauty, and
Petite Salmon, as well as symptomless varieties, Turner’s Shari D and
Sugarland from Moody Gardens in Galveston, Texas were sampled. All samples were
tested for the presence of X. fastidiosa using enzyme-linked
immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and bacterial isolation according to the methods of
Huang and Sherald (2). All symptomatic varieties reacted positively in ELISA,
and colonies characteristic of X. fastidiosa were isolated from all eight
symptomatic varieties 10 to 15 days after incubation at 28°C. The colonies were
confirmed to be X. fastidiosa using polymerase chain reaction (PCR) (2).
ELISA tests and bacterial isolations from the symptomless Shari D and Sugarland
varieties were negative. Membrane entrapment immunofluorescence (MEIF) (1) using
the antibody CREC 26 to X. fastidiosa was also done on three of the
symptomatic varieties and one asymptomatic variety obtained from Moody Gardens,
and fluorescing bacteria were found only in the three symptomatic varieties.
Symptomatic samples of Petite Salmon, one pink variety and one red variety
obtained from a residential area west of Galveston, and a red oleander in
Harlingen, TX, also tested positive with MEIF. Other ELISA-positive samples were
obtained from symptomatic oleanders from Austin, San Antonio, and El Campo, TX.
The X. fastidiosa bacteria isolated from the variety Lane Taylor Sealy
were used to inoculate three red oleander plants by making an 8-cm-long vertical
cut into the stem and then in 15 locations injecting approximately 15 µl of a X.
fastidiosa suspension (10(^8–9) cells per ml). The cut area was wrapped with
Parafilm after inoculation, and the plants were kept at 29°C in a greenhouse.
Three healthy red oleanders were inoculated with periwinkle wilt liquid medium
for controls. Approximately 3 months after inoculation, chlorotic mottling along
the edges of leaves was observed in the oleanders inoculated with X.
fastidiosa, and the bacterium was reisolated from symptomatic leaves as
described above. No symptoms were observed on the control plants, and bacterial
isolation from the control plants was also negative. To our knowledge, this is
the first report to show the causal role of X. fastidiosa in oleander
leaf scorch and the presence of the disease in different locations in Texas,
extending the geographic range of this important bacterial disease.
References: (1) R. H. Brlansky et al. Plant Dis. 74:863, 1990. (2) Q. Huang
and J. L. Sherald. Curr. Microbiol. 48:73, 2004. (3) A. H. Purcell et al.
Phytopathology 89:53, 1999. (4) R. L. Wichman and D. L. Hopkins. Plant Dis.
84:198, 2000.
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