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First Report of Phakopsora pachyrhizi, Cause of Soybean Rust, on Neonotonia wightii in Paraguay

March 2007 , Volume 91 , Number  3
Pages  325.3 - 325.3

W. Morel , Centro Regional de Investigación Agrícola, Capitán Miranda, Itapúa, Paraguay ; M. R. Miles , USDA-ARS, National Soybean Research Center, University of Illinois, Urbana ; J. R. Hernández , USDA-ARS, Systematic Botany and Mycology Laboratory, Beltsville, MD and USDA-APHIS-PPQ, Commodity Imports Analysis and Operations, Riverdale, MD ; and C. L. Stone and R. D. Frederick , USDA-ARS, Foreign Disease-Weed Science Research Unit, Ft. Detrick, MD



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Accepted for publication 22 November 2006.

Phakopsora pachyrhizi Syd. & P. Syd., the cause of soybean rust, was first observed on soybean (Glycine max (L.) Merr.) in South America in the district of Itapúa in Paraguay during March, 2001 (2). The disease is now widespread in soybean-production areas in South America on soybean and kudzu (Pueraria lobata (Willd.) Ohwi). On 15 March 2006, leaves of the perennial legume Neonotonia wightii (Graham ex Wight & Arn.) Lackey with lesions and rust sori were observed in the Reserva Biológica de Itabó, Departamento Alto Paraná. Lesions were scattered, most contained a single uredinium, mostly hypophyllous, and appeared to be new infections. Lesions with several uredinia, which are indicative of older infections on soybean, were also observed. Sori (Malupa-type) contained hyaline, peripheral, cylindric to clavate paraphyses measuring 24 to 45 × 6 to 13 μm and urediniospores that were hyaline, ovoid to globose, and measuring 20 to 40 × 14 to 25 μm with an echinulate spore wall, characteristics typical of a Phakopsora sp. DNA extracted from sori from leaves of N. wightii was amplified in a real-time fluorescent polymerase chain reaction with the P. pachyrhizi-specific primers Ppm1 and Ppa2 (1). Sequence alignment of the internal transcribed spacer region 2 further confirmed the identification as P. pachyrhizi (1). The host identification was confirmed by J. Kirkbride, USDA/ARS/SBML, using the Smithsonian Institution Department of Botany, U.S. National Herbarium. To our knowledge, this is the first confirmed report of natural infection of P. pachyrhizi on a host other than soybean or kudzu in South America. Voucher specimens were deposited in the herbarium of the Facultad Ciencias Químicas of the Universidad Nacional de Asunción of Paraguay (FCQ) and the National Fungus Collection (Accession No. BPI 875340).

References: (1) R. D. Frederick et al. Phytopathology 92:217, 2002. (2) W. Morel and J. Yorinori. Bol. Divulg. No. 44. Ministerio de Agricultura y Ganadería, Centro Regional de Investigación Agrícola, Capitán Miranda, Paraguay, 2002.



© 2007 The American Phytopathological Society