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Occurrence and Etiology of Brown Apical Necrosis on Persian (English) Walnut Fruit

June 2002 , Volume 86 , Number  6
Pages  599 - 602

A. Belisario , M. Maccaroni , and L. Corazza , Cryptogamic Disease Section, Plant Pathology Research Institute, 00156 Roma, Italy ; V. Balmas , Plant Pathology Institute, University of Sassari, 07100 Sassari, Italy ; and A. Valier , Nogalba, Walnut Producer Cooperative, 45010 Pettorazza, Rovigo, Italy



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Accepted for publication 20 January 2002.
ABSTRACT

In 1998, a severe fruit drop was observed in Italy, principally on cv. Lara Persian (English) walnut (Juglans regia). Dropped fruit showed a brown patch at the blossom end and blackening and rot of inner tissues. The disease, called brown apical necrosis (BAN), was investigated on fruit collected in Italy and France in 1999. In 2000, studies were carried out in three walnut orchards located in Italy and in France to substantiate the etiology of BAN. Isolations performed from inner diseased fruit tissues yielded several fungi, in decreasing frequency of isolation: species of Fusarium and Alternaria, and one species each of Cladosporium, Colletotrichum, and Phomopsis. However, only Fusarium spp. were recovered from stigmas of BAN-affected fruit. The fungi associated with BAN-diseased fruit and species composition differed among locations and over time, confirming results obtained in previous investigations. The species of Fusarium used in pathogenicity tests reproduced BAN-disease symptoms when inoculated on fruit, whereas an Alternaria alternata isolate caused only limited necrosis of the style. However, the role of the other fungi commonly isolated from BAN-diseased fruit remains to be defined. The walnut blight pathogen, Xanthomonas arboricola pv. juglandis, occasionally was isolated from BAN-diseased fruit. No correlation was found between the extent of external brown patches and the size of inner lesions. Repeated isolations from and inoculations of fruit demonstrated that BAN can be considered a complex disease, and the inner infections originate from the style of the fruit.


Additional keywords: complex diseases, nut disease

© 2002 The American Phytopathological Society