pythium arrhenomanes
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2019 ◽  
Vol 10 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ruben E. M. Verbeek ◽  
Evelien Van Buyten ◽  
Md Zahangir Alam ◽  
David De Vleesschauwer ◽  
Jonas Van Bockhaven ◽  
...  

Plant Disease ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 102 (11) ◽  
pp. 2382 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y. Ling ◽  
J. Xia ◽  
K. Koji ◽  
X. Zhang ◽  
Z. Li

2018 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Reyes-Tena ◽  
R. Vallejo-González ◽  
R. Santillán-Mendoza ◽  
G. Rodríguez-Alvarado ◽  
J. Larsen ◽  
...  

Rice ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
R. E. M. Verbeek ◽  
C. G. B. Banaay ◽  
M. Sikder ◽  
D. De Waele ◽  
C. M. Vera Cruz ◽  
...  

Plant Disease ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 99 (12) ◽  
pp. 1823-1831 ◽  
Author(s):  
Takeshi Toda ◽  
Akinori Iwasa ◽  
Shinichi Fuji ◽  
Hiromitsu Furuya

In Japan, rice seedlings grown in nurseries and used for transplanting are subject to a damping-off disease caused by Pythium spp. In this study, 148 isolates of Pythium spp. were obtained from rice seedlings in 39 locations of northern Japan. Among the isolates, 137 were identified as Pythium arrhenomanes using polymerase chain reaction (PCR) with species-specific primers, DNA sequencing analyses of the internal transcribed regions of ribosomal DNA, and the morphologies of oogonia, antheridia, oospores, and zoosporangia. Inoculation tests showed that the isolates identified as P. arrhenomanes were pathogenic to rice seedlings and parasitic to southern crabgrass with only minor damage. P. arrhenomanes was reisolated from the roots of both rice seedlings and southern crabgrass. Poaceae weeds, hosts of Pythium spp., grow in and around nurseries and in ridges surrounding rice fields. To detect Pythium spp., 188 Poaceae weeds were collected from 37 locations in Akita Prefecture. P. arrhenomanes was frequently detected in 164 weed roots from all locations by PCR using species-specific primers. Thus, we determined that P. arrhenomanes exists in and around rice seedling nurseries and rice fields, and that it is much more widely distributed than previously recognized in northern Japan.


Plant Disease ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 98 (8) ◽  
pp. 1155-1155 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. Tsukiboshi ◽  
K. Sugawara ◽  
A. Masunaka

Corn (Zea mays L.) is the most important forage crop in Japan. It was cultivated on 92,000 ha in 2011 and was mainly used as whole crop silage for cattle feed. In September 2009, a root and stalk rot disease was detected on corn plants cultivated in Tochigi, located in the central region of Japan. The symptoms of the disease included wilting of whole plants after the R5 (dent) stage (2) with drooping ears. Roots turned black and their number decreased. Further, the stalks became hollow and soft and harbored white hyphae. This tissue deterioration made machine harvest difficult. We obtained seven isolates of a Pythium-like organism by single hypha isolation from surface-sterilized pieces of diseased roots and stems on water agar and deposited one of the isolates at the NIAS genebank, Japan, under the accession no. MAFF511547. The isolate was grown in the dark on V8 juice agar medium for 10 days to produce oogonia. The oogonia were globose, light brown to yellow, smooth, 23.9 to 30.5 μm in size, and had 1 to 8 antheridia. Oospores were mostly plerotic, and oogonia walls were 1.3 to 2.7 μm thick. The morphology of the isolates was similar to that of Pythium arrhenomanes Drechsler and consistent with the species description (3). We analyzed the rDNA-ITS region sequences of the isolate as described by Kageyama et al. (1). The sequence (GenBank Accession No. AB903904) showed 99.1% (783/790 bp) similarity with that of P. arrhenomanes (AY598628). On the basis of morphological and rDNA sequence similarities, we identified the isolates obtained from corn as P. arrhenomanes. The pathogenicity of the isolate was confirmed by planting corn seedlings of the commercial Pioneer Brand hybrid 36B08 immediately after germination in five replicate pots containing soil mixed with 5% boiled barley grain by weight, incubated with or without the isolate for 7 days. After 10 days of incubation in a greenhouse at 20 to 25°C, only the inoculated plants exhibited symptoms of root and stalk rot. Since the inoculated organism was readily re-isolated from the diseased stems and roots, the pathogenicity of the isolate was confirmed. For field observation, the same hybrid of forage corn was sown in the fields in Nasushiobara, Tochigi, on 16 May 2011. The hybrid was sown in a row of 2 m, with 20 seeds planted at a distance of 10 cm with two replicates. For inoculum, the isolate was cultured on 5-cm-long wooden toothpicks, previously soaked in potato dextrose broth and placed on a V8 agar plate for 7 days at 25°C in the dark until covered by hyphae. The toothpicks were pierced into wounds made on the stems of corn plants, approximately 10 cm above the ground, using a thin iron needle. The wounds were about 2 mm in diameter and 2 cm deep. Field inoculation was conducted in late July at the R1 (silking) growth stage. Disease symptoms were observed in mid-September at R5, and only those plants that were inoculated with the toothpicks harboring the hyphae exhibited the typical stem rot symptoms. To our knowledge, this is the first report of root and stalk rot caused by P. arrhenomanes in forage corn in Japan. References: (1) K. Kageyama et al. J. Phytopathol. 151:485, 2003. (2) S. W. Ritchie et al. Spec. Rep. 48. Iowa State Univ. Coop Ext. Serv., Ames, 1993. (3) A. J. Van der Plaats-Niterink. Stud. Mycol. 21:1, 1981.


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