First Report of Black Spot Needle Blight of Pinus sylvestris var. mongolica Litv. Caused by Heterotruncatella spartii in China

Pinus sylvestris var. mongolica Litv. (Pinales: Pinaceae) is an excellent tree for soil and water conservation in Northeast China. The Honghua'erji area in Inner Mongolia is the "hometown of P. sylvestris var. mongolica", however, in recent years, coniferous diseases of P. sylvestris...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inPlant disease
Main Authors Wang, Shu-Ren, Zhang, Haixiao, Chen, Yun-Ze, Zhang, Yun-Di, Li, Da-Bo, Huang, Ying, Zhang, Guocai, Yang, Jing
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 02.02.2022
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Summary:Pinus sylvestris var. mongolica Litv. (Pinales: Pinaceae) is an excellent tree for soil and water conservation in Northeast China. The Honghua'erji area in Inner Mongolia is the "hometown of P. sylvestris var. mongolica", however, in recent years, coniferous diseases of P. sylvestris var. mongolica have frequently occurred here. During the investigation, it was found that some black spot needle blight had been observed in addition to the common blight caused by Sphaeropsis sapinea. From May to September 2020, black spot needle blight was found on hundreds of P. sylvestris var. mongolica trees in four forest farms, and the infection rate among the forests was 24.58 % (n=240). This disease first appeared on the upper part of the needles, and the needles then became withered and gradually showed light black spots, although they remained green. As the disease progressed, the needles eventually died and turned gray with many dark black spots. Fungal isolate named YJ-1 was obtained from infected needles of symptomatic pine trees, and a voucher specimen was deposited in Heilongjiang Province Key Laboratory of Forest Protection. Microscopic observation showed the conidia were 3-septate (4 cells) clavate spindles that measured 23.9 μm (20.8-25.9) × 5.9 μm (4.5-8.2) (n=50). The middle two cells were dark brown, and the septa were darker than the cells. Both apical and basal cells were hyaline. The apical cell had 2-4 appendages (mostly 3), and the basal cell had a truncate base (n=50). The cultural characteristics on potato dextrose agar medium were flat off-white and dense in 3-5 d. At approximately 5-7 d, the reverse side of the colony turned pale to slightly luteous. Superficial black acervuli were distributed in the center of the mature colonies after 10 d. Morphological, cultural and microscopic characteristics observed were similar of Heterotruncatella spartii (basionym: Truncatella spartii) reported by Hlaiem et al (2019). To further identify, total DNA was extracted and the internal transcribed spacer region (ITS-rDNA) was amplified by PCR using the primers ITS1/ITS4 and sequenced for BLASTn analysis and phylogenetic tree construction. The resulting 564 bp sequence (GenBank Accession No. OL662864) had 99.24% (521/525) to H. spartii MFLUCC 15-0537, with bootstrap support of at least 94% using the Neighbor-Joining algorithm by MEGA-X (Felsenstein, 1985). The fungus was identified as H. spartii based on morphology and molecular methods. A pathogenicity test was conducted by preparing a conidial suspension of 2.0 × 107 conidia/mL. The suspension was sprayed onto the needles of 20 pots of annual P. sylvestris ar. mongolica seedlings, and the control was sprayed with sterile water. Then the seedlings were placed in a constant temperature room at 25 °C. After 30 d, typical symptoms appeared on 11 inoculated needles, while the control needles remained symptomless. After 50 d, the re-isolation infection rate reached 66.7 %. The fungus present on the inoculated seedlings was morphologically identical to that originally observed on diseased pines, fulfilling Koch's postulates. The fungus was isolated from Spartium junceum for the first time and designated Truncatella spartii (Senanayake et al, 2015). It was then renamed H. spartii (Liu et al, 2019) and has been reported to infect P. pinea in Tunisia (Hlaiem et al, 2019). To our knowledge, this is the first report of H. spartii causing black spot needle blight on P. sylvestris var. mongolica in China and worldwide.
ISSN:0191-2917
DOI:10.1094/PDIS-12-21-2667-PDN