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Fusarium Yellowing of Sugar Beet Caused by Fusarium graminearum from
Minnesota and Wyoming. L. E. Hanson, USDA-ARS, Crops Research Laboratory,
1701 Center Ave., Fort Collins, CO 80526. Plant Dis. 90:686, 2006; published
on-line as DOI: 10.1094/PD-90-0686A. Accepted for publication 10 February 2006.
In 2004, we received beet samples from seven fields from Minnesota and Wyoming
that had foliar interveinal yellowing symptoms and vascular discoloration
frequently associated with Fusarium yellows. Isolations were made from the
vascular and cortical tissue. Hyphal tip isolates of Fusarium were
obtained from beets, including eight isolates of Fusarium graminearum.
F. graminearum was isolated from beets from three fields in Minnesota and
one field in northern Wyoming. F. graminearum isolates were tested for
pathogenicity by dipping roots of 5-week-old sugar beet plants (FC716) in a
suspension of 10(^4) spores per ml for 8 min, 10 plants per isolate. Spore
suspensions were shaken periodically to aid mixing. A known moderately virulent
isolate of F. oxysporum f. sp. betae (Fob13) (3), the causal agent
of Fusarium yellows of sugar beet, was used as a positive control. For a
negative control, plants were dipped in sterile water. Dipped plants were
planted in Cone-tainers (3.8 cm diameter × 21 cm; Stuewe and Sons, Inc.,
Corvallis, OR) containing pasteurized potting mix and placed in a greenhouse at
24 to 27°C. Plants were fertilized with 15-30-15 fertilizer biweekly. After 2
weeks, plants were rated weekly for 5 weeks using a 0 to 4 scale in which 0 = no
disease and 4 = complete plant death (2). After the final rating, plants were
removed from soil and the tap root was examined for symptoms. Root segments were
surface disinfested with 0.5% sodium hypochlorite and plated on potato dextrose
agar to confirm presence of the pathogen. The experiment was done twice. Three
of the eight isolates of F. graminearum caused mild to moderate foliar
symptoms (rating 2 to 3), including interveinal yellowing, wilting, and stunting
of inoculated plants, and mild vascular discoloration was observed in some root
sections. Pathogenic isolates were originally from different beets. Foliar
symptoms were similar to those caused by Fob13, but the F. oxysporum f.
sp. betae caused more vascular discoloration than did the F.
graminearum isolates. No interveinal yellowing or wilting was observed on
foliage of the control plants, and no vascular discoloration was observed in a
cross section of the root. Cultures of F. graminearum or F. oxysporum
recovered from inoculated plants were morphologically similar to isolates used
for the inoculations. No Fusarium was isolated from the roots of plants
soaked in sterile water. An interesting note is that no isolates of F.
graminearum were recovered among more than 100 Fusarium isolates
collected from sugar beet roots from Colorado over a 4-year period. F.
graminearum was recovered in one sample from Wyoming in 2004. However, in
the 2004 samples from Minnesota, this species was isolated at the same frequency
as F. oxysporum. While F. graminearum has been isolated from beets
in the Red River Valley (1), it has not previously been reported to cause
symptoms on growing sugar beet.
References: (1) U. Bosch and C. J. Mirocha. Appl. Environ. Microbiol.
58:3233, 1992. (2) L. E. Hanson and A. L. Hill. J. Sugar Beet Res. 41:139, 2004.
(3) C. E. Windels et al. Plant Dis. 89:341, 2005.
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