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First Report of Root Rot on Asparagus Caused by Phytophthora megasperma in Canada

April 2003 , Volume 87 , Number  4
Pages  447.1 - 447.1

V. Vujanovic , Institut de recherche en biologie vegetale, Universite de Montreal and Jardin botanique de Montreal, 4101 East Sherbrooke Street, Montreal, Quebec, Canada H1X 2B2 ; C. Hamel , Department of Natural Resource Sciences, McGill University, 21111 Lakeshore Road, Ste-Anne-de-Bellevue, Quebec, Canada H9X 3V9 ; S. Jabaji-Hare , Department of Plant Science, McGill University, 21111 Lakeshore Road, Ste-Anne-de-Bellevue, Quebec, Canada H9X 3V9 ; and M. St-Arnaud , Institut de recherche en biologie vegetale, Universite de Montreal and Jardin botanique de Montreal, 4101 East Sherbrooke Street, Montreal, Quebec, Canada H1X 2B2



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Accepted for publication 25 January 2003.

In August 2002, Phytophthora megasperma Drechs. was isolated from wilted plants of Asparagus officinalis L. cv. Guelph Millenium displaying spear and crown rot. Six affected plants were sampled in a commercial asparagus field located in the Saguenay-Lac-Saint-Jean Region (300 km northeast of Montreal, Quebec, Canada). The fungus was isolated from asparagus fern stalks, crown tissue, and spears after a rainy period and identified using morphological and cultural characteristics (2). In pinkish 4-week-old cultures, unbranched stalks bore abundant sporangia, which were ovoid to obpyriform in shape, 15 to 45 m long, and 10 to 30 m in diameter. Characteristic circular oospores >30 m in diameter were produced on V8 juice agar at 25°C in darkness after 1 month. Pathogenicity was tested on asparagus cvs. Guelph Millenium and Jersey Knight. A mycelium suspension (3 ml at 106 CFU/ml) prepared from 1-week-old shaken potato dextrose (PD) broth was sprayed on 30 1-week-old seedlings grown in petri plates filled with sterilized, moist, sandy soil and held at 20°C (day/night). Controls received sterile PD broth. Within 3 weeks of incubation in the dark, inoculated seedlings exhibited necrotic symptoms similar to those observed initially, while controls remained healthy. The pathogen was isolated from 75% of the ‘Guelph Millenium’ and 98% of the ‘Jersey Knight’ symptomatic seedlings, but not isolated from the control seedlings. In North America, disease caused by P. megasperma resulting in yield loss has been reported in California and New York (1,3). In Canada, the etiology of asparagus diseases is not well characterized. To our knowledge, this is the first report of P. megasperma on asparagus plants in Canada.

References: (1) P. A. Ark and J. T. Barrett. Phytopathology 28:754, 1938. (2) D. C. Erwin et al. Phytophthora: Its Biology, Taxonomy, Ecology, and Pathology. The American Phytopathological Society, St Paul, MN, 1983. (3) T-L. Kuan and D. C. Erwin. Phytopathology 70:333, 1980.



© 2003 The American Phytopathological Society