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First Report of Bacterial Leaf Spot of Italian Dandelion (Cichorium
intybus) Caused by a Pseudomonas syringae Pathovar in California.
S. T. Koike, University of California Cooperative Extension, Salinas 93901; and
C. T. Bull, USDA-ARS, Salinas 93905. Plant Dis. 90:245, 2006; published on-line
as DOI: 10.1094/PD-90-0245A. Accepted for publication 2 November 2005.
Italian dandelion (Cichorium intybus) is a leafy, nonhead forming
chicory plant that is eaten as a fresh vegetable in salads. During the late
summer (August through October) of 2002, in the Salinas Valley (Monterey
County) in California, a previously unreported disease was found in commercial
Italian dandelion fields. Early symptoms were angular, vein delimited, dark,
water-soaked leaf spots that measured 2 to 7 mm in diameter. As disease
developed, spots retained angular edges but exhibited various irregular shapes.
Spots commonly formed along the edges of the leaves; in some cases these spots
developed into lesions that measured between 10 and 30 mm long. Spots were
visible from adaxial and abaxial sides and were dull black in color. A
cream-colored pseudomonad was consistently isolated from leaf spots that were
macerated and streaked onto sucrose peptone agar. Fungi were not recovered from
any of the spots. Recovered strains were blue-green fluorescent when streaked
onto King’s medium B agar. Bacterial strains were levan positive, oxidase
negative, and arginine dihydrolase negative. Strains did not rot potato slices
but induced a hypersensitive reaction on tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum cv.
Turk). These data indicated that the bacteria belonged to LOPAT group 1 of
Pseudomonas syringae (1). Pathogenicity of six strains was tested by growing
inoculum in nutrient broth shake cultures for 48 h, diluting to 10(^6) CFU/ml, and
spraying onto 12 6-week-old plants of Italian dandelion cv. Catalogna Special.
Untreated control plants were sprayed with sterile nutrient broth. After 10 to
12 days in a greenhouse (24 to 26°C), leaf spots similar to those observed in
the field developed on all inoculated plants. Strains were reisolated from the
spots and identified as P. syringae. Control plants remained symptomless.
These inoculation experiments were done twice and the results were the same.
Amplification of repetitive bacterial sequences (repetitive sequence-based
polymerase chain reaction [rep-PCR]) demonstrated that all Italian dandelion
strains had the same rep-PCR fingerprint, which differed from fingerprints of
P. syringae pv. tagetis and P. syringae pv. tabaci.
Additionally, toxin specific primers did not amplify tagetitoxin or tabtoxin
biosynthesis genes from Italian dandelion strains. To our knowledge, this is the
first report of bacterial leaf spot of commercially grown Italian dandelion in
California caused by a P. syringae pathovar. Because fields were
irrigated with overhead sprinklers, the disease was severe in several fields
and as much as 30% of those plantings were not harvested.
Reference: (1) R. A. Lelliott et al. J. Appl. Bacteriol. 29:470, 1966.
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