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First Report of Plectosporium Blight on Pumpkin and Squash Caused by Plectosporium
tabacinum in New York. P. Jimenez and T. A. Zitter, Department of Plant
Pathology, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853. Plant Dis. 89:432, 2005;
published on-line as DOI: 10.1094/PD-89-0432A. Accepted for publication 5
January 2005.
In early August 2004, pumpkin and zucchini squash (Cucurbita pepo)
plants grown in conventional and organic commercial operations in Orange and
Dutchess counties, respectively, showed spindle-shaped lesions on vegetative
tissues and silver russeting and spots on fruit, typical of Plectosporium
blight. Approximately 20% of pumpkin fruit were affected at this early time in
yield development, while the zucchini planting had been abandoned due to
disease. Symptomatic pieces of stem, petioles, and main leaf veins were excised,
surface disinfected with 0.5% sodium hypochlorite, placed on
one-quarter-strength potato dextrose agar, and incubated at 21°C with a 12-h
photoperiod. Pale pink colonies with pinkish, hyaline, aerial mycelium developed
from the tissues. When examined microscopically, simple and branched
conidiophores with apical phialides were observed, as well as non- and
one-septate ellipsoidal to slightly curved conidia that measured 7.5 to 13.0 ×
2.5 to 3.3 µm. The fungus fits the description of Plectosporium tabacinum
(van Beyma) M.E. Palm, W. Gams, & H.I. Nirenberg (synonyms Microdochium
tabacinum (von Arx, 1984) and Fusarium tabacinum (Gams & Gerlagh,
1968) (1). Pathogenicity was tested on 10 seedlings each of pumpkin, zucchini,
gourd (C. pepo), winter squash (C. moschata), and cucumber (Cucumis
sativa). Plants were spray inoculated at the three true-leaf stage with a
spore suspension at 10(^4) conidia/ml in water with 1% gelatin. Plants were held
overnight in a moist chamber and then transplanted into 12-cm-diameter pots and
kept in the greenhouse for the rest of the experiment. P. tabacinum was
reisolated from all inoculated plants which completes Koch’s postulates.
Symptoms were noted 3 days after inoculation on pumpkin, zucchini, and gourd,
with typical spindle-shaped lesions on the main stem, petioles, and main leaf
veins (2). Symptoms developed after 1 week on winter squash, and lesions were
mostly concentrated on the older portion of the stem with occasional lesions on
the petiole and main leaf veins. Symptoms on cucumber, however, did not develop
until 2 weeks after inoculation and appeared as an inconspicuous line of
coalesced lesions on the ridges of the main stem only. These symptoms could
easily be misidentified as physical abrasions from handling or from wind
scarring. These results confirm the high susceptibility of C. pepo
species, and indicate that other cucurbits are susceptible, albeit at a lower
level. To our knowledge, this is the first report of P. tabacinum in New
York. A voucher specimen has been deposited in the Cornell Plant Pathology
Herbarium (Accession No. CUP 67504).
References: (1) M. E. Palm et al. Mycologia 87:397, 1995; (2) T.
A. Zitter. Microdochium blight. Page 28 in: Compendium of Cucurbit Diseases. T.
A. Zitter, D. L. Hopkins, and C. E. Thomas, eds. The American Phytopathological
Society, St. Paul, MN, 1996.
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