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Wilt and Collapse of Cuphea ignea Caused by Phytophthora tropicalis
in Italy. S. O. Cacciola and D. Spica, University of Palermo, 90128,
Palermo, Italy; D. E. L. Cooke, Scottish Crop Research Institute, Invergowrie,
Dundee, Scotland (UK); and F. Raudino and G. Magnano di San Lio, Mediterranean
University of Reggio Calabria, 89061 Gallina di Reggio Calabria, Italy. Plant
Dis. 90:680, 2006; published on-line as DOI: 10.1094/PD-90-0680A. Accepted for
publication 7 February 2006.
The genus Cuphea (Lythraceae) includes approximately 250 species of
annual, evergreen perennials and short shrubs native to Central and South
America. During the springs of 2003 and 2004, 10% of the nursery stock of
approximately 12,000 potted cigar-flowers (C. ignea A. DC) grown in a
screenhouse at a commercial ornamental nursery near Piedimonte Etneo, Sicily,
had symptoms of wilt, defoliation, and rapid collapse of the entire plant. These
foliar symptoms were associated with a reduced root system, browning of the
collar, and dark brown discolored roots. A Phytophthora species was
consistently recovered by plating small pieces of rotted roots of symptomatic
plants onto selective medium (3); pure cultures were obtained by single-hypha
transfers. On potato dextrose-agar (PDA), cardinal temperatures for growth were
10 to 35°C and the optimum was 28 to 30°C. Sporangiophores were umbellate or in
a close monoclasial sympodium and mean dimensions of sporangia were 52 × 26 mm,
with a mean length/width ratio of 2:1. Sporangia produced on V8 juice agar (VJA)
were ellipsoid, fusiform, or limoniform with a tapered base. They were
papillate, occasionally bipapillate, caducous, with a long pedicel (as much as
150 µm). All isolates were mating type A1 determined by pairing with A2
reference isolates of P. palmivora (Butl.) Butl. and P. nicotianae
Breda de Haan. Oogonia with amphigynous antheridia were formed on VJA after 10
to 15 days at 24°C in the dark. Occasionally, 10 of 15 isolates formed small
chlamydospores on VJA. Electrophoretic patterns of total mycelial proteins and
four isozymes (acid and alkaline phosphatase, esterase, and malate
dehydrogenase) on polyacrylamide slab gels (3) of all Cuphea isolates
were very similar to those of reference isolates of P. tropicalis M.
Aragaki & J. Y. Uchida from Convolvulus cneorum L. (IMI 391714) and
Rhamnus alaternus L., respectively. In addition, the Cuphea isolates
were clearly distinct from reference isolates of other species including P.
capsici Leon., P. citricola Sawada, P. citrophthora (R. E.
Smith & E. H. Smith) Leon., P. nicotianae, and P. palmivora. On
the basis of morphological cultural characters and the electrophoretic
phenotype, the isolates were identified as P. tropicalis. Internal
transcribed spacer (ITS) regions of rDNA sequences (2) confirmed the
identification. Koch’s postulates were fulfilled by testing three cigar-flower
isolates, including isolate IMI 391709, on 10 6-month-old potted cuttings of
Cuphea inoculated by applying a 10-ml zoospore suspension (2 × 10(^4)
zoospores/ml) to the crowns, incubated for 24 h at 100% relative humidity, and
maintained in the greenhouse at 20 to 24°C. After 10 days, crowns and stems were
brown and all plants wilted within 20 days. Ten control plants treated with
water remained healthy. P. tropicalis was reisolated from infected
tissues. The test was repeated with similar results. In Europe, P. tropicalis
has been reported on Cyclamen persicum Mill. in Germany (4) and C.
cneorum and R. alaternus in Italy (1), indicating a broad host
range and spreading in ornamental nurseries.
References: (1) S. O. Cacciola et al. Boll. Acc. Gioenia Sci. Nat. 31:57,
1999. (2) S. O. Cacciola et al. For. Snow Landsc. Res. 76:387, 2001. (3) D. C.
Erwin and O. K. Ribeiro. Pages 39-41, 138-139 in: Phytophthora Diseases
Worldwide. The American Phytopathological Society, St. Paul MN. 1996. (4) W. W.
P. Gerlach and A. Schubert. Plant Dis. 85:334, 2001.
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