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The American Phytopathological Society
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First Report of Root Rot Incited by Thielaviopsis basicola on Lamb’s
Lettuce (Valerianella olitoria) in Europe. A. Garibaldi, G. Gilardi,
and M. L. Gullino, Centre of Competence for the Innovation in the
Agro-environmental Sector (AGROINNOVA) and DIVAPRA–Patologia Vegetale, Via
Leonardo da Vinci 44, 10095 Grugliasco, Italy. Plant Dis. 89:205, 2005;
published on-line as DOI: 10.1094/PD-89-0205B. Accepted for publication 28
November 2004.
Lamb’s lettuce (Valerianella olitoria) is increasingly grown in Italy
and used in the preparation of processed salad. In the fall of 2003, plants of
lamb’s lettuce cvs. Trophy and Palmares showing symptoms of severe stunting
were observed in several commercial plastic greenhouses near Bergamo in northern
Italy. The distribution of the disease was generally uniform in the greenhouses
and 10 to 30% of the plants were affected. The first symptoms, consisting of
reduced growth of the plants and extensive chlorosis, developed in October at
temperatures ranging between 10 and 20°C on 30-day-old plants. The roots of
diseased plants showed extensive necrosis that extended to the crown of the
plants. The diseased tissue was disinfested for 1 min in 1% NaOCl and plated on
potato dextrose agar amended with 100 µg/l streptomycin sulfate. A fungus with
the morphological characteristics of Thielaviopsis basicola was
consistently and readily isolated from symptomatic tissues (1). Catenulate,
cylindrical, hyaline endoconidia and catenulate, subrectangular, thick-walled
chlamydospores (aleuriospores) were observed. Ten-day-old plants of cvs. Trophy
and Palmares were artificially inoculated by dipping three isolates of T.
basicola obtained from infected plants for 15 min in a spore suspension (1
× 10(^6) CFU/ml). Noninoculated plants served as control treatments. Each
treatment consisted of 30 plants. Plants were maintained at 20°C in a growth
chamber, with 12 h of light/day. Symptoms developed 25 days after the artificial
inoculation on both cultivars, and T. basicola was consistently
reisolated from diseased plants. The noninoculated plants remained healthy. The
pathogenicity test was carried out twice. To our knowledge, this is the first
report of T. basicola on lamb’s lettuce in Italy as well as in the
world. The same disease was described on corn salad (Valerianella locusta)
in the United States (2).
References: (1) D. E. Mathre and A.V. Ravenscroft. Phytopathology 56:337,
1966. (2) M. E. Stanghellini et al. Plant Dis. 74:81, 1990.
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