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First Report of Leaf Spot of Smooth Bromegrass
Caused by Pithomyces chartarum in Nebraska.
C. Eken, Department of Plant Protection, Faculty
of Agriculture, Atatürk University, 25240 Erzurum, Turkey; and C. C. Jochum and
G. Y. Yuen, Department of Plant Pathology, University of Nebraska, Lincoln, NE
68583. Plant Dis. 90:108, 2006; published on-line as DOI: 10.1094/PD-90-0108C.
Accepted for publication 18 October 2005.
Smooth bromegrass (Bromus inermis Leyss.)
is the most common perennial grass species cultivated for forage in North
America. During late fall of 2004, smooth bromegrass plants in Lincoln, NE were
observed to have brown lesions on leaf midveins that were several centimeters
long. Symptomatic leaves were surface disinfested for 1 min in 2% NaOCl and
incubated at 25°C on potato dextrose agar (PDA) and water agar. The fungus,
Pithomyces chartarum (Berk. & Curt) Ellis, was isolated consistently and
identified on the basis of morphological characteristics (1). Colonies were
effused and black on PDA. Conidiophores measured 3.5 to 8 × 1.9 to 3.9 µm and
were smooth and single. Conidia (7 to 25 × 9.5 to 14 µm) were broadly
ellipsoidal, pale brown to dark brown, verrucose with mainly three transverse
septa and one to two longitudinal septa. Pathogenicity tests were conducted on
50-day-old plants by spraying with a conidial suspension (2.5 × 10(^5) spores per
ml). Control plants were sprayed with sterile water. All plants were kept in a
moist chamber (100% relative humidity) for 3 days and then transferred to a
greenhouse (25°C, >70% relative humidity, and a 12-h photoperiod). One week
after spraying, elongated lesions developed on leaf midveins of inoculated
plants from which P. chartarum was consistently reisolated. No symptoms
were observed on control plants. While P. chartarum has been described as
a saprotroph or a parasite on a wide range of plants primarily in the tropics
and subtropics, including the southern United States (2), it was reported
previously on B. inermis only in Canada (3). This report expands the
distribution and host range of P. chartarum as a pathogen in the United
States.
References: (1) M. B. Ellis. Dematiaceous Hyphomycetes. Commonwealth
Mycological Institute, Kew, Surrey, England, 1971. (2) D. F. Farr et al. Fungal
Databases, Systematic Botany and Mycology Laboratory, On-line publication. ARS,
USDA, 2005. (3) J. H. Ginns. Compendium of Plant Disease and Decay Fungi in
Canada 1960-1980. Res. Br. Can. Agric. Publ. 1813, 1986.
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