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The American Phytopathological Society
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First Report of Pyricularia grisea (Gray Leaf Spot) on Perennial
Ryegrass (Lolium perenne) in Nevada. F. P. Wong and K. A. de la
Cerda, University of California, Department of Plant Pathology, 202 Fawcett Lab,
Riverside 92521. Plant Dis. 90:683, 2006; published on-line as DOI:
10.1094/PD-90-0683A. Accepted for publication 17 February 2006.
In August of 2005, a golf course in Las Vegas, NV reported turf loss from an
unknown disease on perennial ryegrass fairways. Samples from this course were
examined, and diseased plants were found covered with lesions and sporulation
typical of gray leaf spot as caused by Pyricularia grisea (Cooke) Sacc.
With petroleum jelly, sporulating leaves were attached to the inside top
surface of 100-mm petri dishes filled with 15 ml of 1.5% water agar. Conidia
were allowed to drop onto the agar surface and 24 h later, individual
germinating pyriform conidia were transferred to petri dishes containing
one-quarter-strength potato dextrose agar (¼-PDA) with the aid of a fine needle
and stereomicroscope. Isolates of the fungus were maintained at 28°C with
constant fluorescent light. Isolates were examined 7 to 10 days later, and
morphology and conidia production were consistent with that described previously
for P. grisea (1). Koch’s postulates were performed using a single
isolate (SSGC-1.1) grown for 14 days on ¼-PDA. The petri dish was flooded with
15 ml of sterile distilled water plus 0.05% Tween 20 and conidia dislodged into
the solution with a rubber policeman to obtain a solution of approximately 5 ×
10(^3) conidia per ml. Using a modified thin-layer chromatography plate sprayer,
the solution was misted onto six pots of 6-week-old perennial ryegrass (a
mixture of approximately 33% each of varieties ‘Kokomo’, ‘Cabo’ and
‘Secretaria’), seeded at a density of 2 kg per 93 m(^2) grown in 4- × 4-cm plastic
pots filled with University of California soil mix. As a control treatment, six
pots of perennial ryegrass (grown as previously described) were treated with
water plus 0.05% Tween 20 only. Pots of plants were placed into closed,
translucent, plastic containers lined with wet paper towels to provide a moist
environment and held at 30°C for 48 h. Pots of plants were transferred to an
incubator set at 30°C and 80% relative humidity with 12 h of alternating light
and dark cycles. Four days after inoculation, plants misted with conidia
developed symptoms typical of gray leaf spot. Plants were again placed into
closed plastic containers lined with wet paper towels for 24 h, at which time,
lesions on symptomatic plants developed abundant conidia characteristic of P.
grisea. Water-only treated plants did not show any symptoms or signs of
disease. P. grisea was reisolated from sporulating leaves as described
above. The disease has been spreading in the midwestern and northeastern United
States since first reported in 1991 on perennial ryegrass in Pennsylvania. It
has only recently been found on turfgrass in California (2), and to our
knowledge, this is the first report of this pathogen on perennial ryegrass in
Nevada.
References: (1) M. B. Ellis. Dematiaceous Hyphomycetes. CMI, Kew, Surrey,
UK, 1971. (2) W. Uddin et al. Plant Dis. 86:75, 2002.
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