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Title: First Report of Powdery Mildew Caused by Golovinomyces ambrosiae on Leucanthemum vulgare in Korea. Author: Park JH, Choi YJ, Choi IY, Shin HD. Journal: Plant Dis; 2022 Jul 26; ():. PubMed ID: 35881873. Abstract: Leucanthemum vulgare Lam. (Asteraceae), known as ox-eye daisy, is a perennial herb native to Europe and western Asia (Clements et al. 2004, McDougall et al. 2018). In Korea, this plant was introduced for ornamental purposes but has been naturalized as a widespread invasive species. In June 2015, symptoms of a powdery mildew disease were observed on L. vulgare in a public garden in Goseong (38°14'18"N, 128°32'56"E), Korea. Since then, its findings have continued throughout the country, including Mokpo and Seogwipo (in 2018), Hongcheon and Seoul (in 2020), Boeun, Gunsan, and Namwon (in 2022), where the disease incidence was often higher than 80%. Symptoms first appeared as circular to irregular white powdery patches covering leaves and stems. Affected plants became distorted, eventually losing their aesthetic and ornamental value. A total of sixteen samples were deposited in the herbarium of Korea University (KUS-F), Korea. Microscopic observations showed that hyphal appressoria were nipple-shaped. Conidiophores were cylindrical, 98 to 157 × 9 to 12 μm, and produced 2 to 5 immature conidia in chains with a sinuate outline. Foot cells were cylindrical, straight, and 37 to 65 μm long. Conidia were ellipsoid to barrel-shaped, 23 to 39 × 12 to 19 μm, with a length/width ratio of 1.4 to 2.3 and devoid of fibrosin bodies. Germ tubes were produced in the perihilar position of the conidia. Primary conidia were apically rounded and basally subtruncated. No chasmothecia were found until the plants died in winter. The morphological characteristics were typical for anamorph of the genus Golovinomyces. To identify the fungus, genomic DNA was extracted from the four herbarium specimens (KUS-F 28650, 30839, 31728, and 31787). PCR products were amplified using the primer sets PM10/ITS4 for internal transcribed spacer (ITS) and PM3/TW14 for the large subunit (LSU) of the rDNA (Mori et al. 2000, Bradshaw and Tobin 2020). Sequences obtained in the present study were deposited at GenBank (accession numbers ON834488-91 for ITS and ON834494-7 for LSU). A BLASTn search of the Korean specimens showed 100% identity with reference sequences of G. ambrosiae in GenBank (KX98730, MK452580, and MK452588 for ITS and MF612182, MK452653, and MK452661 for LSU). In phylogenetic trees of a concatenated dataset of the ITS and LSU sequences, the Korean specimens formed a well-supported clade with the reference sequences of G. ambrosiae. Pathogenicity tests were carried out by touching and dusting an infected leaf (KUS-F 31787) onto the upper leaf surface of five healthy plants. Five non-inoculated plants served as controls. After two weeks, all inoculated plants formed white patches on the surface of leaves and stems, whereas the control plants remained symptomless. The fungus on the inoculated plants was identical to that observed on the initially diseased plant, fulfilling Koch's postulates. As a result, the causal agent of the powdery mildew on L. vulgare was confirmed as G. ambrosiae (Schwein.) U. Braun & R.T.A. Cook, based on the current taxonomy and nomenclature of this species by Qiu et al. (2020).. Previously powdery mildew collections on L. vulgare have been reported as Golovinomyces cichoracearum (≡ Erysiphe cichoracearum) s. lat. in Estonia, Finland, Germany, and Switzerland, Golovinomyces biocellatus in Spain, and Podosphaera fusca (probably P. xanthii according to the current taxonomy) in the former Soviet Union (now Russia and adjacent countries) (Farr and Rossman 2022). This study is the first report of powdery mildew disease caused by G. ambrosiae on L. vulgare in Korea. Qiu et al. (2020) confirmed the occurrence of G. ambrosiae on L. maximum, another species of the genus Leucanthemum. As powdery mildew causes damage to the cultivation of L. vulgare by loss of ornamental value, appropriate control measures should be developed.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]