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First Report of Pyricularia grisea Causing Gray Leaf Spot on
Kikuyugrass (Pennisetum clandestinum) in the United States. F. P.
Wong, University of California, Department of Plant Pathology, 2317 Webber Hall,
Riverside 92521; and W. Gelernter and L. Stowell, PACE Turfgrass Research
Institute, 1267 Diamond St., San Diego, CA 92109. Plant Dis. 89:433, 2005;
published on-line as DOI: 10.1094/PD-89-0433C. Accepted for publication 14
December 2004.
Kikuyugrass (Pennisetum clandestinum) is a warm-season turfgrass that
has been adopted for use in fairways and roughs in a number of subtropical
areas including southern California, Mexico, Australia, and South Africa. During
August 2003, a foliar disease of Kikuyugrass was reported from a number of golf
courses in southern California. Examination of diseased plants showed the
presence of dark, olive green-to-brown lesions on the foliage. Incubation of
these plants in a moist chamber for 12 h led to the production of numerous
pyriform conidia from these lesions that were characteristic of Pyricularia
grisea. Single-spore isolates of the fungus were obtained from infected
kikuyugrass samples by transferring conidia to acidified 1.5% water agar and
then transferring single, germinated conidia to one-quarter-strength potato
dextrose agar. Colony morphology and conidia production were consistent with
that described for P. grisea (1). Koch’s postulates were performed
separately for two single-spore isolates (OSGC-1 and CCCC-1) obtained from
infected kikuyugrass. For each isolate, 2-week-old, glasshouse-grown seedlings
of kikuyugrass (cv. ‘AZ-1’) and perennial ryegrass (Lolium perenne)
grown in 75-mm pots in soilless media were inoculated with conidia from either
OSGC-1 or CCCC-1. For each test, six pots of both kikuyugrass and ryegrass were
inoculated, and the tests were conducted three times for each isolate. Conidia
were obtained from isolates grown on clarified V8 agar in 100-mm petri plates
for 14 days at 25°C. Suspensions were made by adding 10 ml of sterile distilled
H(2)O (sdH(2)O) to the plates, scraping the surface of the media to dislodge the
conidia, filtering the suspension through cheesecloth, and then adjusting the
final concentration to 1 × 10(^6) conidia/ml with sdH(2)O. Seedlings were inoculated
with the conidial suspensions with an aerosol applicator, placed in plastic
boxes lined with wet paper towels, and sealed to provide adequate moisture for
infection. Boxes were incubated at 28°C for 48 h after which time the covers
were removed and the plants maintained in ambient glasshouse conditions at
approximately 28°C. In all three replicated experiments, kikuyugrass seedlings
inoculated with OSGC-1 or CCCC-1 developed symptoms of disease approximately 5
days after inoculation, while inoculated perennial ryegrass did not, even 14
days after inoculation. Symptomatic kikuyugrass leaves were taken randomly
from plants from each of the three replicated tests, surface disinfested in
0.3% sodium hypochlorite for 30 s, rinsed with sdH(2)O, blotted dry, and placed
onto acidified water agar in petri plates. Twenty-four hours later, abundant
sporulation was observed from symptomatic tissue with conidiophores bearing
conidia typical of P. grisea. To our knowledge, this is the first report
of gray leaf spot being caused by P. grisea on Pennisetum clandestinum
in North America.
Reference: (1) M. B. Ellis. Dematiaceous Hyphomycetes. Commonwealth
Mycological Institute, Kew, Surrey, UK, 1971.
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