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Occurrence of Race 3 of Phytophthora nicotianae in North Carolina, the Causal Agent of Black Shank of Tobacco

May 2010 , Volume 94 , Number  5
Pages  557 - 562

C. A. Gallup and H. D. Shew, Department of Plant Pathology, Campus Box 7903, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC 27695



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Accepted for publication 6 January 2010.
Abstract

Black shank, caused by the oomycete Phytophthora nicotianae, causes significant annual yield losses in tobacco. Race 3 of P. nicotianae is reported here for the first time from North Carolina. It was identified from a North Carolina tobacco field with a history of tobacco varieties with Phl gene resistance and numerous field sites with no known deployment of varieties with the Phl gene. Race 3 was originally described from cigar-wrapper tobacco in Connecticut in the 1970s, but has not been reported in any other location since. Race 3 was defined as overcoming the Phl gene from Nicotiana longiflora but not the Php gene from N. plumbaginifolia. Stem and root inoculations were conducted on a set of host differentials to determine the virulence of North Carolina isolates. Stem inoculation was unable to distinguish between races 0 and 3 of P. nicotianae and is not a reliable method of identifying these virulence types. Race 1 gave a unique phenotype using stem inoculation. Root inoculation was the only reliable means of distinguishing between races 0 and 3. This is the first report of race 3 in North Carolina and the first report of damage to seedlings from root inoculations and to plants containing the Phl gene in naturally infested soil.



© 2010 The American Phytopathological Society