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Black Choke Disease Caused by an Ephelis
sp. on Purple Fountain Grass in Maryland.
E. Lewis Roberts and J. F. White, Jr,, Department of Plant Biology and
Pathology, Cook College-Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ 08902. Plant Dis.
90:112, 2006; published on-line as DOI: 10.1094/PD-90-0112A. Accepted for
publication 13 September 2005.
Purple fountain grass (Pennisetum
alopecuroides) is indigenous to Asia, prized for its foxtail-like purple
flowers, and widely used as an ornamental. During October 1999, black choke
disease was found on P. alopecuroides cv. Hameln (L.) Spreng at a plant
nursery in Maryland. Disease symptoms include mummification of inflorescences by
black conidial stromata, distorted leaf tissue, and a dense layer of white
epiphytic mycelium on the adaxial leaves and culms. Stromata were initially
white but became black with age. Microscopic analysis of the isolated fungus
indicated that the causal organism was an Ephelis sp., American Type
Culture Collection No. MYA-3317. The ephelidial conidia developed in sporodochia
on stromata and were hyaline, filiform to acicular, and 18 to 21 × 1 µm.
Cultures on potato dextrose agar were off-white and 50 mm in diameter after 14
days at 23°C. Analysis of herbarium specimens of several Balansia spp.
revealed that the Ephelis sp. isolate bears morphological resemblance to
Asian and not American Balansieae. In fact, the infection observed on
Pennisetum sp. forms similarly to Ephelis sp. infection on Oryza
sativa L. (Asian) that also results in development of stromata on panicles
and a mycelial network enclosing the panicles, preventing maturation and
expansion. On both plants, the infected inflorescence becomes black with age and
appears mummified as pseudosclerotia form. Furthermore, flag leaves and tillers
of both plants appear slightly distorted and silver due to the epibiotic
mycelia. The causal agent of black choke disease on rice is Ephelis oryzae
Syd. (teleomorph = Balansia oryzae-sativae Hashioka). The mature stroma
of E. oryzae forms on the inflorescence and is embedded with a layer of
ovate perithecia. Immature stromata bear conidiomata that are cupulate to
cushion shaped and black, producing hyaline, branched conidiophores that
terminate in phialides. Conidia are ephelidial, filiform to acicular, hyaline,
and 18 to 22 × 1.5 µm (2). To determine the phylogenetic relationship between
other balansioid fungi and the Ephelis sp. isolate, the nuclear ribosomal
internal transcribed spacer (ITS1) region was amplified with primers ITS4 and
ITS5 (3). Maximum parsimony analysis of the ITS1 sequences showed that the
Ephelis sp. infecting P. alopecuroides cv. Hameln grouped (100%
bootstrap support) in a clade with Ephelis oryzae, Balansia sclerotica,
Balansia andropogonis, and Balansia sp.; all endemic to Asia and
tightly groups with the Asian rice pathogen Ephelis oryzae (100%
bootstrap support). Further phylogenetic analysis using topological constraints
indicated that Ephelis sp. is not appropriately grouped with American
balansioid species. Since P. alopecuroides is often imported to North
America from Asia (1), it is likely that Ephelis sp. on P.
alopecuroides is endemic to Asia and perhaps was transported along with its
host to North America. The disease ontogeny, morphology, and sequence
similarities between the Ephelis sp. isolated from Pennisetum sp.
and E. oryzae suggests that these fungi are evolutionarily close, sibling
species, or conspecific. To our knowledge, this is the first report of choke
disease on P. alopecuroides in the United States.
References: (1) A. S. Hitchcock. Manual of the Grasses of the United
States. A. Chase, ed. U.S. Government Print Office, Washington DC, 1951
(2) F. N. Lee and P. S. Gunnell. Udbatta. Page 29 in: Compendium of Rice
Diseases. R. K. Webster and P. S. Gunnell, eds. The American Phytopathological
Society, St. Paul. MN, 1992. (3) J. F. White Jr. et al. Mycologia 89:408, 1997.
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