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White Mold of Houndstongue (Cynoglossum officinale) Caused by Sclerotinia
sclerotiorum in Canada. H. C. Huang, R. S. Erickson, B. Van Hezewijk,
and R. De Clerck-Floate, Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada Research Centre,
Lethbridge, AB, Canada T1J 4B1. LRC Contribution #387-05034. Plant Dis. 89:1013,
2005; published on-line as DOI: 10.1094/PD-89-1013C. Accepted for publication 24
June 2005.
Houndstongue (Cynoglossum officinale L.) is a rangeland weed introduced
into Canada from Eurasia, and it can be highly toxic to livestock feeding in
pastures (3). During 2004, houndstongue plants near Creston, BC, Canada
developed water-soaked lesions with white mycelia and black sclerotia on leaves
and crowns. Isolations from diseased leaf tissues and sclerotia on potato
dextrose agar (PDA) at 20°C for 5 to 7 days produced fungal colonies with
formation of black sclerotia 5 to 10 mm in diameter. A single hyphal tip isolate
from houndstongue. Ss-HT-C. was compared with a sunflower isolate of S.
sclerotiorum, sun-87 (1), for morphology and pathogenicity. For apothecial
production, Ss-HT-C and sun-87 were grown on PDA in petri dishes at 10°C for 10
weeks, and sclerotia produced were harvested, placed on moist vermiculite in
petri dishes, and incubated at 20°C under light for 3 weeks. Mature apothecia
were excised, stained with acid fuchsin, mounted on slides, and examined for
asci and ascospores with a microscope. There were no morphological differences
between Ss-HT-C and sun-87, each producing an ascus with eight binucleate,
elliptical ascospores, measuring 4 × 10 µm (width × length), supporting the
identity of Ss-HT-C as S. sclerotiorum (2,4). For pathogenicity tests of
Ss-HT-C and sun-87, mycelial plugs (8 mm in diameter) were removed from the
margin of colonies grown on PDA for 5 days at 20°C, and placed on leaves of C.
officinale plants that were grown in a greenhouse (20 ± 4°C) to the
rosette stage. Inoculated plants were covered with clear plastic bags, kept in
the same greenhouse for 3 days, and the diameters of the leaf lesions
developed at inoculation sites were measured. The experiment was run twice with
30 plants per isolate and five leaves per plant. Uninoculated plants covered
with plastic bags were used as controls. Experiments used a completely
randomized design. Results of leaf inoculations showed that Ss-HT-C and sun-87
were pathogenic to houndstongue. There was no statistical difference between
isolates or trials. The frequency of leaves with lesions was 90% for Ss-HT-C and
93% for sun-87. The mean leaf lesion diameters were 32 and 35 mm for Ss-HT-C and
sun-87, respectively. Leaves of control plants remained healthy. S.
sclerotiorum was reisolated from leaves with lesions, but not from
controls. After 14 to 21 days, new sclerotia, 5 to 10 mm in diameter, were
formed on leaves of inoculated plants. The plants eventually died. This study
confirms that S. sclerotiorum is the causal agent for the disease of
houndstongue in Canada, and to our knowledge, this is the first world record
of infection of this weed by S. sclerotiorum.
References: (1) H. C. Huang and G. C. Kozub. Plant Prot. Bull. 31:333, 1989.
(2) L. Kohn, Phytopathology 69:881, 1979. (3) J. A. Pfister et al. J. Range
Manag. 45:254, 1992. (4) J. A. L. Wong and H. J. Willetts, J. Gen. Microbiol.
112:29, 1979.
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