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First Report of an Ovary Smut of Italian Thistle Caused by a Microbotryum
sp. in Greece. D. K. Berner and M. B. McMahon, USDA/ARS, Foreign
Disease-Weed Science Research Unit, 1301 Ditto Avenue, Fort Detrick, MD 21702;
J. Kashefi, European Biological Control Laboratory, Thessaloniki, Greece; and E.
Erbe, USDA/ARS, SGIL, Electron Microscopy Unit, Bldg. 465, Entomology Road,
Beltsville, MD 20705. Plant Dis. 90:681, 2006; published on-line as DOI:
10.1094/PD-90-0681B. Accepted for publication 27 February 2006.
Italian thistle (Carduus pycnocephalus L.), family Asteraceae, is a
common weed in Greece. It is also a problematic invasive weed in the western
United States and a target of biological control efforts. In May 2005, smutted
capitula of Italian thistle were found in an abandoned field in Halkiades,
Greece. A total of 38 smutted plants, representing approximately 20% of those
plants present, were found in a portion of the field that was lightly infested
with Italian thistle. In most cases, capitula of all diseased flowers were
smutted. In one or two cases, capitula on some branches of the plants were
smutted, whereas capitula on other branches were healthy. Diseased capitula were
noticeably more globose than healthy ovoid capitula, and diseased capitula did
not open completely. When diseased capitula were split open, the ovaries in all
florets within the capitula were filled with powdery masses of smut teliospores.
Diseased capitula were collected, air dried, and sent to the quarantine facility
of the Foreign Disease-Weed Science Research Unit (FDWSRU), USDA/ARS, Fort
Detrick, MD. Teliospores within the capitula were extracted and observed
microscopically. Teliospores of isolate DB05-014 were relatively uniform
in shape and size, globose, 12.0 to 17.3 × 12.3 to 18.0 µm (mean 14.5 × 15.1
µm), violet tinted pale to medium yellowish-brown; wall reticulate appearing as
coarse, radiate wings on the spore margin, 5 to 7 polyangular meshes per spore
diameter, muri, 0.7 to 2.0 µm high in optical median view appearing as gradually
narrowing blunt spines, 0.5 to 1 µm wide at their basis; in scanning electron
microscopy (SEM), the meshes were subpolygonal, wall and interspaces were finely
verruculose. Teliospores were more globose and slightly smaller than the
description of Microbotryum cardui (A. A. Fischer Waldh.) Vánky (2), but
the mean sizes were within the described range. When compared with teliospores
of M. cardui on C. acanthoides, the numbers of polyangular meshes
per spore diameter were within the range of the description using SEM, but the
muri were about one-half of the height of those described. Nucleotide sequences
for the internal transcribed spacers (ITS 1 and 2) and 5.8S ribosomal region
(GenBank Accession No. AY280460) were aligned with sequences of other smut fungi
using the BLAST algorithm of the National Center for Biotechnology Information.
The closest alignment of DB05-014 was with M. scorzonerae (590 of 627 bp
identities or 94% with 2% gaps). No sequences of M. cardui were available
for comparison, but only M. cardui has been reported on Carduus
spp. (1,2). Another smut reported on a Carduus sp. is
Thecaphora trailii (1). DB05-014 is a likely variant of M. cardui
from a previously unknown host. Italian thistle is an annual plant that
reproduces solely by seeds (achenes). Because of the lack of seed production on
smutted plants and the systemic nature of the disease, this fungus has great
potential as a biological control agent for Italian thistle in the United
States. A voucher specimen has been deposited with the U.S. National Fungus
Collections (BPI 871812). To our knowledge this is the first report of a
Microbotryum sp. parasitizing C. pycnocephalus.
References: (1) K. Vánky. European Smut Fungi. Gustav Fischer Verlag,
Stuttgart, Germany, 1994. (2) K. Vánky and D. Berner. Mycotaxon 85:307, 2003.
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