Abstract
A new leaf spot disease of sugarcane caused by Bipolaris spicifera was found for the first time at Luoman town of Liuzhou city, Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, China in 2011. Three pathogenic isolates were obtained and their pathogenicity was confirmed respectively. The pathogenic isolates were identified as B. spicifera based on conidial morphology and rDNA-ITS (internal transcribed spacer) sequences comparison. This is the first report of B. spicifera causing leaf spot on sugarcane in China.
China is the 3rd largest sugarcane (Saccharum officinarum L.) producing country following Brazil and India. For the climatic conditions, major sugarcane producing areas distribute in the south of China, including Guangxi, Yunnan, Guangdong, Hainan and Fujian provinces. Approximately 60% of the total cane yield is produced in Guangxi (Li 2005). Diseases are considered to be the most severe threat to sugarcane production in Guangxi, especially smut, ratoon stunting and viral diseases. Recently, a new leaf spot disease was found on sugarcane in a field at Luoman town of Liuzhou city, Guangxi province in 2011.
The symptoms on sugarcane cultivar GT 21 firstly appeared as a small brown-red water-soaked spot (Fig. 1). Subsequently the diseased areas turned into a black/brown elliptical or fusiform lesion with the central part being grey to brown, while the periphery of the lesion remained brown-red. Brown concentric rings were frequently observed on a fully-developed lesion (Fig. 2). The symptoms on the upper and lower leaf surfaces were similar. The disease occurred mainly on the middle and lower node leaves of sugarcane in the field. Three fungal isolates (L1, L2 and L3) were obtained from the leaves with typical symptoms and the pathogenicity of each isolate to sugarcane leaves was confirmed by artificial inoculation tests based on Koch’s postulates. Colonies cultured on potato dextrose agar (PDA) were brown to black, circular, woolly or cottony, and abundant conidia were produced. Conidiophores were solitary or in small fascicles, flexuous, geniculate with well developed conidial scars, brown to black, measuring 31.0–510.0 × 3.5–7.5 μm. Conidia were cylindrical, rounded at both ends, brown, smooth, 2–4 (typically 3) septate, bipolar-germinating, measuring 14.0–30.0 × 6.5–12.0 μm (average 23.0 × 9.2 μm) (Figs. 3, 4). Total genomic DNA samples of the three isolates were extracted using the CTAB method (Lin et al. 2011). The rDNA-ITS sequences of the isolates were amplified with universal primers (ITS1: 5’-TCCGTAGGTGAACCTGCGG-3’ and ITS4: 5’-TCCTCCGCTTATTGATATGC-3’). The nucleotide sequences of the isolates shared 99–100% maximal identity with those of the GenBank-derived B. spicifera isolates. Nucleotide sequences of the isolates were submitted to the GenBank database with the accession numbers of JN695634, JN695635 and JN695636 for isolates L1, L2 and L3, respectively. Culture plates of the isolates were deposited in the China General Microbiological Culture Collection Center in Beijing, China, with the collection numbers of CGMCC 3.14921, CGMCC 3.14922 and CGMCC 3.14923 for isolates L1, L2 and L3, respectively. The isolates were identified as B. spicifera based on the morphological characters of conidia as well as rDNA-ITS sequences.
B. sacchari, B. stenospila and B. hawaiiensis have been reported as pathogens causing leaf spot diseases on sugarcane (Rott et al. 2000). B. spicifera has been reported causing seedling blight of sugarcane in Algeria (Narendra et al. 1978), no report has shown that the pathogen can also cause leaf spot disease on sugarcane. This is the first report of B. spicifera causing leaf spot disease on sugarcane.
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Acknowledgements
This study has been financed in part by grants from the fund of China Agriculture Research System (CARS-20-2-3), Agricultural Public Welfare Research Item (200903004) and Earmarked Fund for Modern Agro-industry Technology Research System (NYCYTXGXCXTD-02).
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Lin, S.H., Huang, C.H., Deng, Z.Y. et al. First report of leaf spot disease on sugarcane caused by Bipolaris spicifera in China. Australasian Plant Dis. Notes 7, 51–53 (2012). https://doi.org/10.1007/s13314-012-0046-x
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s13314-012-0046-x