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Detection of Soybean Rust caused by Phakopsora pachyrhizi in
Northwestern Argentina. L. D. Ploper, V. González, M. R. Gálvez, N. V. de
Ramallo, M. A. Zamorano, G. García, and A. P. Castagnaro, Estación
Experimental Agroindustrial “Obispo Colombres”, C.C. 9, (4101) Las Talitas,
Tucumán, Argentina. Plant Dis. 89:774, 2005; published on-line as DOI:
10.1094/PD-89-0774B. Accepted for publication 1 April 2005.
Asian soybean rust, caused by Phakopsora pachyrhizi, is regarded as one
of the most destructive diseases of soybean (Glycine max (L.) Merr.). In
Argentina, it was first detected in the province of Misiones in the northeast
near Paraguay and Brazil during the 2001–02 growing season (2). The following
season, it also was found in the neighboring province of Corrientes. However, it
did not reach major soybean production areas in northern Argentina until the end
of the 2003–04 season. During April 2004, as soybean crops were nearing
maturity, the disease was found throughout the region of northwestern Argentina,
which includes the provinces of Tucumán, Salta, Jujuy, Catamarca, and Santiago
del Estero, where approximately 6% of the soybean crop of Argentina is produced.
During February and March, the area had a severe drought and above average
temperatures, but in April, rainfall was abundant, particularly during the first
half of the month. Soybean rust was first observed on 16 April in several
locations of the departments (counties) of Moreno and Jiménez in the province
of Santiago del Estero, and the following week in the departments of Alberdi,
Burruyacú, Cruz Alta, Famaillá, La Cocha, and Leales in the province of
Tucumán, in the department of Santa Rosa in the province of Catamarca, and in
the departments of Anta, Metán, Rosario de la Frontera, and San Martín in the
province of Salta. In those fields where the disease was detected, nearly all
plants showed symptoms. Affected crops were mostly in growth stages R7 to R8,
except for a few fields that had been planted late and were in a late R5 stage.
Yield losses as much as 28% and premature defoliation occurred in these fields
only. Disease severity, measured as percentage of affected leaf area, ranged
from 45 to 50% in untreated fields and 0.9 to 39% in fungicide-treated fields.
Leaf lesions were reddish brown, irregularly shaped, and were more abundant on
the abaxial surface. Under the dissecting microscope, uredinia were observed as
erumpent pustules with a conspicuous central pore. Masses of urediniospores were
expelled through the pore and covered the pustules. Urediniospores were hyaline
to pale yellow-brown, sub globose to ovoid, with finely echinulate, hyaline
walls, and an average size of 27.8 × 18.5 µm. Because there are two
morphologically similar species of Phakopsora that infect soybean, P.
pachyrhizi (the Asian species) and P. meibomiae (the New World
species), a molecular differentiation was carried out using the polymerase chain
reaction (PCR) assay described by Frederick et al. (1). DNA extracted from 37
samples from different locations was amplified with specific primers for both
species of Phakopsora and specific primers for P. pachyrhizi and
for P. meibomiae. Twenty-eight samples amplified with the two species
primers and with the P. pachyrhizi primer. None of the samples amplified
with the P. meibomiae primer. Specimens have been deposited at Instituto
Miguel Lillo, Tucumán, Argentina. These results confirmed the presence of P.
pachyrhizi in the provinces of Catamarca, Tucumán, Salta, and Santiago del
Estero, Argentina.
References: (1) R. D. Frederick et al. Phytopathology 92:217, 2002. (2) R.
L. Rossi. Plant Dis. 87:102, 2003.
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