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The American Phytopathological Society
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First Report of Cephalosporium gramineum, Causal Agent of
Cephalosporium Stripe of Wheat, in a Commercial Winter Wheat Field in Virginia.
D. G. Schmale III, A. K. Wood-Jones, M. A. Hansen, E. L. Stromberg, and C. W.
Roane, Department of Plant Pathology, Physiology, and Weed Science, Virginia
Polytechnic Institute and State University, Blacksburg, VA 24061. Plant Dis.
91:329, 2007; published on-line as DOI: 10.1094/PDIS-91-3-0329C. Accepted for
publication 19 October 2006.

Cephalosporium stripe (CS) (2) was identified in a commercial field of winter
wheat (Triticum aestivum) near Riner, Montgomery County, Virginia in May
2006. Nearly 15% of the field was severely affected. Broad, yellow-brown stripes
were observed on the leaf blades of affected plants, and many plants were
stunted and had ripened prematurely. Symptomatic plants were associated with low
acidic (pH 5.2), wet spots of the field. Leaves and nodes of affected plants
were surface disinfested for 1 min in 5% sodium hypochlorite, plated on corn
meal agar (CMA), and incubated at 20°C for 5 days. Cephalosporium gramineum
was isolated from numerous plants. Cultures of the fungus produced hyaline
conidiophores approximately 5 µm long and unicellular conidia 3 to 7 µm long.
Aqueous suspensions of mycelia and conidia were prepared from pure cultures.
Several spring wheat cultivars were wounded by severing the root mass and were
inoculated when the fifth stem node was detectable (35 on Zadoks scale).
Noninoculated plants were wounded as controls. Plants were kept in the
greenhouse at temperatures of 22 to 27°C. After 14 days, inoculated plants
produced symptoms of CS, and the fungus was reisolated from the leaves of these
plants. No symptoms were observed on noninoculated control plants. Though CS had
been observed in Virginia in research nurseries (1), to our knowledge, this is
the first confirmed report of the disease in a commercial wheat field in
Virginia.
References: (1) J. B. Jones et al. Plant Dis. 64:325, 1980. (2) C. M.
Stiles and T. D. Murray. Phytopathology 86:177, 1996.

Symptoms of Cephalosporium stripe on spring wheat following
greenhouse inoculations with Cephalosporium gramineaum
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