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The American Phytopathological Society
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First Report of Rust Caused by Puccinia carthami on Safflower in Oman.
M. L. Deadman, A. M. Al Sadi, and S. Al Jahdhami, Department of Crop Sciences,
Sultan Qaboos University, Box 34, Al Khod 123, Oman; and M. C. Aime, USDA ARS,
SBML, 10300 Baltimore Ave, Beltsville, MD 20705. Plant Dis. 89:208, 2005;
published on-line as DOI: 10.1094/PD-89-0208C. Accepted for publication 12 November 2004.
Safflower (Carthamus tinctorius L.) is a minor, but culturally important
crop in Oman; the dried flowers produce a pigment used in facial ornamentation.
Although Oman is not a commercial producer of safflower, the region is a center
of diversity and a source of genetic material for breeding programs. Production
of oil from safflower has potential in Oman, where plant growth is prolific. In
April 2004, leaf samples showing rust symptoms were collected from Mudhaibi, 100
km south of Muscat. Chestnut brown pustules covered both sides of the leaves,
but not the stems, and yielded urediniospores and teliospores typical of the
pathogen. Urediniospores were globose, 25 µm in diameter with three germ pores.
Two-celled teliospores were chestnut brown, minutely verrucose, with a single,
depressed germ pore in each cell. The pathogen was identified as Puccinia
carthami Corda (voucher specimen deposited in the U.S. National Fungus
Collections, BPI863557; nuclear ribosomal large subunit DNA voucher sequence
deposited in GenBank, Accession No. AY787782). On the basis of phylogenetic
analyses, the rust from Oman belongs to a complex of closely related Puccinia
spp. that infects members of the Cardueae. Elsewhere, in addition to leaf
infections, P. carthami causes foot and root disease of safflower (1)
with teliospores surviving in the soil and on seed to initiate new infections.
Germplasm is now being collected and will be screened for variation in response
to rust infection.
Reference: (1) M. L. Schuster et al. Phytopathology 42:211, 1952.
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