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First Report of Stem Spots Caused by Alternaria sp. on Berberis
sp. in Iran. S. Mirabadi, F. Soumi, and A. R. Golnaraghi, Department of
Plant Protection, College of Agriculture and Natural Resources, Science and
Research Campus, Islamic Azad University, P.O. Box 14515-775, Tehran, Iran; and
S. Rezaee, Department of Plant Pathology, Science and Research Campus, Islamic
Azad University, Tehran, Iran. Plant Dis. 89:1013, 2005; published on-line as
DOI: 10.1094/PD-89-1013A. Accepted for publication 27 June 2005.
During the summer of 2004, approximately 150 Berberis sp. (Berberis
thunbergii cv. Rose Glow) showing dark brown, eye-like elongated spots (7 to
22 mm long and 1 to 3 mm wide) on stems near the crown toward the top were
observed in a park in Tehran, the capital of Iran. Red and yellow spots on the
leaves and defoliation were also recorded for some of the affected plants. A
total of 28 samples from 16 individual plants (sampling included all symptomatic
parts of the plants) were collected and evaluated for the possible casual agent
of the disease. Fungi with spores that are characteristic of the genus Alternaria
(2), including dark mycelium and brief and simple conidiophores with catenulate
dictyospores, were isolated from the detached leaf and stem pieces of diseased
plants. The pathogenicity of five isolates was investigated using Koch’s
postulate. Twenty cut stems and 10 rooted plants of Berberis sp., with or
without wounding on their stems and leaves, were inoculated with the spore
suspension (10(^4) spores per ml) prepared by using 10-day-old cultures of the
isolates grown on potato dextrose agar at 25°C in the dark. The inoculated cut
stems were covered for 3 days with a plastic tent and kept in a greenhouse at 25
± 5°C with more than 12 h of light. These covers were not used for the rooted
plants that were inoculated under field conditions. For each test, at least two
controls were used. Symptoms similar to those observed in the field appeared on
inoculated stems in 6 to 7 days. On leaves, dark, reddish brown spots (different
from the field observations) were induced 3 to 4 days after inoculation. The
disease on leaves, which eventually led to defoliation, was more severe than
that observed in the field. Stem spots occurred on covered and uncovered
inoculated plants; however, the lesions on the covered plants were deeper than
those on the uncovered plants. Both types of plants died 3 to 4 weeks after
inoculation. Although the fungi were isolated from diseased plants from one
park, similar symptoms also were observed on Berberis sp. planted
in other parks and streets, etc. The genus Alternaria (Deuteromycetes)
caused leaf and stem spot diseases on different plant hosts (1). To our
knowledge, this is the first report of a natural occurrence of Alternaria
sp. on Berberis sp. in Iran.
References: (1) G. N. Agrios. Plant Pathology, 4th ed., Academic Press, NY,
1997. (2) M. B. Ellis. More Dematiaceous Hyphomycetes. Commonwealth Mycological
Institute, Kew, England, 1976.
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