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First Report of Angular Leaf Spot Caused by Phaeoisariopsis griseola
on Phaseolus coccineus in Argentina. S. A. Stenglein and P. A.
Balatti, CONICET-CICBA, INFIVE, Facultad de Ciencias Agrarias y Forestales,
Universidad Nacional de La Plata, CC 327, (1900) La Plata, Buenos Aires,
Argentina; and O. N. Vizgarra and L. D. Ploper, Estación Experimental
Agroindustrial “Obispo Colombres”, CC 9, (4101) Las Talitas, Tucumán, Argentina.
Plant Dis. 90:248, 2006; published on-line as DOI: 10.1094/PD-90-0248B. Accepted
for publication 3 October 2005.
Angular leaf spot (ALS), caused by Phaeoisariopsis griseola (Sacc.)
Ferraris, is one of the most destructive and widespread problems of common bean
(Phaseolus vulgaris L.) in Tucumán and other northwestern provinces of
Argentina (4). Symptoms similar to those of ALS were observed during April 2005
on most plants of runner bean (P. coccineus L.) in an 80-ha field in Tafí
del Valle, Tucumán (2,000 m above sea level). Leaf lesions were brown to gray,
irregular to angular to circular, and 0.5 to 1 cm in diameter. Lesions on pods
were oval to circular with reddish brown centers surrounded by darker brown
borders. Conidia in vivo were curved cylindrical to obclavate with one to five
septa and measured 25 to 60 × 3.5 to 7 µm. The conidiophores were 100 to 250 µm
high and clustered together to form synnemata measuring 20 to 50 µm in
diameter. The pathogen was isolated by placing conidia from diseased leaves onto
potato dextrose agar (PDA) at pH 6. Colonies measuring 2 to 3 mm in diameter
composed of dense, dark olive mycelium developed after incubation in the dark at
24 ± 2°C for 3 to 4 days. Pathogenicity of the isolate was tested with conidia
obtained from the second subculture of 14-day-old colonies on PDA. Conidial
suspensions of 2 × 10(^4) conidia per ml were sprayed onto the upper and lower
surfaces of the first trifoliolate leaves of six runner bean plants, 18 days
after planting. Inoculated and control plants (sprayed with distilled water)
were placed in a growth chamber with a 12-h photoperiod at 24 ± 2°C and 95 to
100% relative humidity and 48 h later moved to the greenhouse. Disease symptoms
were evaluated 18 days after inoculation. While control plants were healthy, all
inoculated plants showed symptoms similar to those observed in the field. The
fungus that was consistently reisolated from lesions in the inoculated plants
was identified as Phaeoisariopsis griseola on the basis of fungal
morphology (1), symptoms produced on leaves (3), and random amplified
polymorphic DNA data with primer 5(prime)-CAATCGCCGT-3(prime) (2). Runner bean is a new crop
in Tafí del Valle, which is a geographically isolated area. In a period of only
2 years, the area cultivated with beans increased approximately five-fold.
Because of this, the presence of a pathogen like Phaeoisariopsis griseola,
which causes considerable reduction in yield in most common bean-producing areas
of Argentina, is of concern. To our knowledge, this is the first report of ALS
occurring on P. coccineus in Argentina. This report may prompt the
inclusion of regular testing of seeds for ALS in P. coccineus-production
areas. A voucher culture has been deposited in the LPSC (Culture collection of
the La Plata Spegazzini Institute) No. 844.
References: (1) M. B. Ellis. Dematiaceous Hyphomycetes. CMI, Kew, Surrey,
UK, 1971. (2) P. Guzmán et al. Plant Dis. 83:37, 1999. (3) A. W. Saettler. Pages
15-16 in: Compendium of Bean Diseases. R. Hall, ed, The American
Phytopathological Society, St. Paul, 1991. (4) S. A. Stenglein et al. Pages
209-243 in: Advances in Applied Microbiology, Vol. 52. A. I. Laskin et al., eds,
Academic Press, San Diego, 2003.
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