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Stemphylium solani

Stemphylium solani is a plant pathogen fungus in the phylum Ascomycota. It is the causal pathogen for grey leaf spot in tomatoes and leaf blight in alliums and cotton, though a wide range of additional species can serve as hosts. Symptoms include white spots on leaves and stems that progress to sunken red or purple lesions and finally leaf necrosis. S. solani reproduces and spreads through the formation of conidia on conidiophores. The teleomorph name of Stemphyllium is Pleospora though there are no naturally known occurrences of sexual reproduction. Resistant varieties of tomato and cotton are common, though the pathogen remains an important disease in Chinese garlic cultivation.

Stemphylium solani
Stemphylium solani on tomato leaf
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Ascomycota
Class: Dothideomycetes
Order: Pleosporales
Family: Pleosporaceae
Genus: Stemphylium
Species:
S. solani
Binomial name
Stemphylium solani
G.F.Weber (1930)

Hosts and symptoms edit

Hosts edit

 
Darkening lesions on tomato leaves
 
Advanced necrosis on tomato leaf

Stemphylium solani is of greatest concern in tomatoes, potatoes, peppers, garlic, onions, and cotton, though a wide range of over 20 species have proven susceptible. In tomatoes and potatoes, the resulting disease is known as grey leaf spot. In alliums it is known as leaf blight. Additional hosts are listed below.[1]

  • Onion, Allium ascalonicum
  • Tobacco, Nicotiana tabacum
  • Maize, Zea mays
  • Leek, Allium odorum
  • Garlic, Allium sativum
  • Potato, Solanum tuberosum
  • Spinach, Spinacia oleracea
  • Radish, Raphanus sativus
  • Tomato, Solanum lycopersicum
  • Chinese cabbage, Brassica chinensis
  • Coriander, Coriandrum sativum
  • Rape, Brassica campestris
  • Pea, Pisum sativum
  • Cotton, Gossypium hirsutum
  • Sorghum, Sorghum vulgare
  • Wheat, Triticum aestivum
  • Broad bean, Vicia faba
  • Rice, Oryza sativa
  • Pepper, Capsicum annuum
  • Rape, Brassica napus
  • Amaranth, Amaranthus mangostanus

Symptoms edit

In alliums, infection is first visible as oval white spots, 1–3 mm in length, scattered irregularly over the leaf surface. These spots grow into red or purple colored lesions with a yellow margin and finally progress to leaf wilting and necrosis. Experimentally infected plants have been shown to progress from initial infection to leaf necrosis within eight days. Infection is found only on the stems and leaves of plants.[2] In tomatoes, S. solani symptoms begin as round to oval dark specks on both sides of the leaf with older leaves being affected first. Young lesions may have a yellow halo. As lesions age, they become gray, dry and brittle, eventually falling away to create shot-holing in the leaf. Severe infection results in leaf drop.[3]

Disease cycle and morphology edit

Stemphylium solani is the anamorph stage and reproduces primarily through the production of conidia on conidiophores. Once produced, disease is thought to spread quickly to additional hosts via either mycelium when leaves of adjacent plants are touching or conidia, which can spread through rain or air. S. solani is also believed to be spread via infected seed.[4] Conidia can cause several stages of secondary infection throughout the growing season but infection is most severe following early fruiting.[3] The teleomorph stage of Stemphylium is Pleospora. Sexual ascospores form under cold conditions but natural occurrences have not been documented.[5] Instead, conidia and mycelia overwintering in plant debris are believed to serve as the primary inoculum.[4]

Stemphylium solani grown in potato sugar agar (PSA) culture are characteristically slow growing and darken with age, first to a yellow-brown color after 4 days and then red. Conidiophores grow as long as 170 μm in length with a swollen apex and one to three transverse septa.[1]

Environment edit

Though minimal data specific to S. solani is available, Stemphyllium spp. thrive in high humidity (relative humidity of 85-90%), more than eight hours of leaf wetness (caused by rain, fog, or dew) and temperatures near 18 °C. Though leaf wetness is important, rainfall per se does not appear necessary if humidity or fog provide sufficient leaf wetness.[1] Presence of debris from the previous season may harbor inoculum and increase disease incidence. Heavy fruiting and good soil fertility also favor disease development.[2]

Management edit

Stemphylium solani is most commonly controlled with the use of disease resistant cultivars, especially in tomato and cotton.[5] Resistant tomatoes are marked with the code “St”. Varieties include Beefmaster, Better Boy, Celebrity, First Lady II, Floramerica, Jackpot, and Lemon Boy, Amelia, Crown Jewel, FL 47, FL 91, Linda, Phoenix, Quincy, RPT 6153, Sebring, Solar Fire, Soraya, Talledega, Tygress, and many others.[6][7] Resistance is inherited via the gene Sm, a single dominant gene.[8]

However, resistant cultivars may lack desirable traits, such as a tendency toward early bolting when allium flowers are desirable for markets. When satisfactory resistant cultivars are unavailable, fungicides (tebuconazole, procymidone) can be applied as a seed treatment to provide systemic early season management or as a foliar spray 2-3 times throughout the season.[9][10] Triazole has been shown in laboratory studies to effectively control mycelial growth and provides local systemic protection.[4][11] Risk of infection can also be reduced by delaying fall planting of garlic until temperatures fall below the 18 °C optimal for S. solani growth, and good field sanitation.[4]

Importance edit

With the development of resistant cultivars in of the major crops impacted by this pathogen, the importance of S. solani has been largely mitigated. However, as new strains emerge, continued outbreaks in new crops may continue to cause significant damage and demand a response. For example, the migration of S. solani into the Chinese garlic crop resulted in a 30% average yield loss between 2004 and 2008 with some fields sustaining 70% loss.[12] Similarly, epidemics in cotton have been reported in Brazil and India, resulting in 100% crop loss in India.[13]

Geography edit

Stemphylium solani is found throughout the world. It was first by described by George Weber in 1930 in Florida, United States. It has since been reported in Brazil, Venezuela, India, South Africa, Spain, Australia, Egypt, and China.[4][5]

Related pathogens and diagnosis edit

Though 33 species of Stemphylium have been recognized, many are saprophytic. However, S. botryosum, S. globuliferum, S. herbarum, S. alfalfae, and S. vesicarium all cause agricultural damage including leaf spot in alfalfa and red clover, purple spot in asparagus, and leaf spot in garlic and onions.[14] S. veicarium has historically been the causal agent for leaf spot in garlic and onions but since the late 1990s, S. solani has also been shown to be pathogenic to alliums and a significant cause of disease in Chinese garlic crops. Diagnosis of specific species is determined based on distinct conidia and conidiophore morphology, though significant overlap in characteristics makes identification difficult. DNA studies are currently the most conclusive method of correctly distinguishing species of Stemphylium.[12] In addition to other strains of Stemphyllium, symptoms caused by S. solani can also be easily mistaken for Alternaria porri and Septoria Leaf Spot.[1][2]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Lu Zheng et al., “Host Range and Phytotoxicity of Stemphylium Solani, Causing Leaf Blight of Garlic (Allium Sativum) in China,” European Journal of Plant Pathology 124, no. 1 (October 21, 2008): 21–30.
  2. ^ a b c John P. Damicone and Lynn Brandenberger, “Common Diseases of Tomatoes Part I. Diseases Caused by Fungi” (Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service, n.d.).
  3. ^ a b L. Cedeño and C. Carrero, “First Report of Tomato Gray Leaf Spot Caused by Stemphylium Solani in the Andes Region of Venezuela,” Plant Disease 81, no. 11 (November 1, 1997): 1332–1332.
  4. ^ a b c d e Lu Zheng et al., “Integrated Control of Garlic Leaf Blight Caused by Stemphylium Solani in China,” Canadian Journal of Plant Pathology 32, no. 2 (June 2, 2010): 135–145.
  5. ^ a b c Y.R Mehta, “Genetic Diversity Among Isolates of Stemphylium Solani from Cotton.”
  6. ^ Dennis Pittenger et al., “Growing Tomatoes in the Home Garden” (University of California, 2005)
  7. ^ Gene McAvoy, “Grower’s IPM Guide for Florida Tomato and Pepper Production - Integrated Pest Management and Florida Tomatoes: A Success Story in Progress” (University of Florida Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences, January 2008), http://ipm.ifas.ufl.edu/resources/success_stories/T&PGuide/index.shtml.
  8. ^ Esther Bashi, M. Pilowsky, and J. Rotem, “Resistance in Tomatoes to Stemphylium Floridanum and S. Botryosum F. Sp. Lycopersici,” Phytopathology 63, no. 12 (December 1973): 1542–1544.
  9. ^ Stemphyllium solani
  10. ^ Labrinos, J.L, and F.W. Jr Nutter. “Effects of a Protectant Versus a Systemic Fungicide on Disease Components of Peanut Late Leaf Spot.” Plant Disease 77, no. 8 (1993): 837–845.
  11. ^ Daren Mueller. “Fungicides: Triazoles | Integrated Crop Management.” Integrated Crop Management, November 9, 2006. http://www.ipm.iastate.edu/ipm/icm/2006/5-30/fungicides.html.
  12. ^ a b L. Zheng, J. Huang, and T. Hsiang, “First Report of Leaf Blight of Garlic (Allium Sativum) Caused by Stemphylium Solani in China,” Plant Pathology 57, no. 2 (2008): 380–380.
  13. ^ Y.R. Mehta, Plant Disease 82 (1998): 333.
  14. ^ Marcos P. S. Câmara, Nichole R. O’Neill, and Peter van Berkum, “Phylogeny of Stemphylium Spp. Based on ITS and Glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate Dehydrogenase Gene Sequences,” Mycologia 94, no. 4 (August 2002): 660–672.

External links edit

  • Index Fungorum

stemphylium, solani, plant, pathogen, fungus, phylum, ascomycota, causal, pathogen, grey, leaf, spot, tomatoes, leaf, blight, alliums, cotton, though, wide, range, additional, species, serve, hosts, symptoms, include, white, spots, leaves, stems, that, progres. Stemphylium solani is a plant pathogen fungus in the phylum Ascomycota It is the causal pathogen for grey leaf spot in tomatoes and leaf blight in alliums and cotton though a wide range of additional species can serve as hosts Symptoms include white spots on leaves and stems that progress to sunken red or purple lesions and finally leaf necrosis S solani reproduces and spreads through the formation of conidia on conidiophores The teleomorph name of Stemphyllium is Pleospora though there are no naturally known occurrences of sexual reproduction Resistant varieties of tomato and cotton are common though the pathogen remains an important disease in Chinese garlic cultivation Stemphylium solani Stemphylium solani on tomato leaf Scientific classification Domain Eukaryota Kingdom Fungi Division Ascomycota Class Dothideomycetes Order Pleosporales Family Pleosporaceae Genus Stemphylium Species S solani Binomial name Stemphylium solaniG F Weber 1930 Contents 1 Hosts and symptoms 1 1 Hosts 1 2 Symptoms 2 Disease cycle and morphology 3 Environment 4 Management 5 Importance 5 1 Geography 5 2 Related pathogens and diagnosis 6 References 7 External linksHosts and symptoms editHosts edit nbsp Darkening lesions on tomato leaves nbsp Advanced necrosis on tomato leaf Stemphylium solani is of greatest concern in tomatoes potatoes peppers garlic onions and cotton though a wide range of over 20 species have proven susceptible In tomatoes and potatoes the resulting disease is known as grey leaf spot In alliums it is known as leaf blight Additional hosts are listed below 1 Onion Allium ascalonicum Tobacco Nicotiana tabacum Maize Zea mays Leek Allium odorum Garlic Allium sativum Potato Solanum tuberosum Spinach Spinacia oleracea Radish Raphanus sativus Tomato Solanum lycopersicum Chinese cabbage Brassica chinensis Coriander Coriandrum sativum Rape Brassica campestris Pea Pisum sativum Cotton Gossypium hirsutum Sorghum Sorghum vulgare Wheat Triticum aestivum Broad bean Vicia faba Rice Oryza sativa Pepper Capsicum annuum Rape Brassica napus Amaranth Amaranthus mangostanus Symptoms edit In alliums infection is first visible as oval white spots 1 3 mm in length scattered irregularly over the leaf surface These spots grow into red or purple colored lesions with a yellow margin and finally progress to leaf wilting and necrosis Experimentally infected plants have been shown to progress from initial infection to leaf necrosis within eight days Infection is found only on the stems and leaves of plants 2 In tomatoes S solani symptoms begin as round to oval dark specks on both sides of the leaf with older leaves being affected first Young lesions may have a yellow halo As lesions age they become gray dry and brittle eventually falling away to create shot holing in the leaf Severe infection results in leaf drop 3 Disease cycle and morphology editStemphylium solani is the anamorph stage and reproduces primarily through the production of conidia on conidiophores Once produced disease is thought to spread quickly to additional hosts via either mycelium when leaves of adjacent plants are touching or conidia which can spread through rain or air S solani is also believed to be spread via infected seed 4 Conidia can cause several stages of secondary infection throughout the growing season but infection is most severe following early fruiting 3 The teleomorph stage of Stemphylium is Pleospora Sexual ascospores form under cold conditions but natural occurrences have not been documented 5 Instead conidia and mycelia overwintering in plant debris are believed to serve as the primary inoculum 4 Stemphylium solani grown in potato sugar agar PSA culture are characteristically slow growing and darken with age first to a yellow brown color after 4 days and then red Conidiophores grow as long as 170 mm in length with a swollen apex and one to three transverse septa 1 Environment editThough minimal data specific to S solani is available Stemphyllium spp thrive in high humidity relative humidity of 85 90 more than eight hours of leaf wetness caused by rain fog or dew and temperatures near 18 C Though leaf wetness is important rainfall per se does not appear necessary if humidity or fog provide sufficient leaf wetness 1 Presence of debris from the previous season may harbor inoculum and increase disease incidence Heavy fruiting and good soil fertility also favor disease development 2 Management editStemphylium solani is most commonly controlled with the use of disease resistant cultivars especially in tomato and cotton 5 Resistant tomatoes are marked with the code St Varieties include Beefmaster Better Boy Celebrity First Lady II Floramerica Jackpot and Lemon Boy Amelia Crown Jewel FL 47 FL 91 Linda Phoenix Quincy RPT 6153 Sebring Solar Fire Soraya Talledega Tygress and many others 6 7 Resistance is inherited via the gene Sm a single dominant gene 8 However resistant cultivars may lack desirable traits such as a tendency toward early bolting when allium flowers are desirable for markets When satisfactory resistant cultivars are unavailable fungicides tebuconazole procymidone can be applied as a seed treatment to provide systemic early season management or as a foliar spray 2 3 times throughout the season 9 10 Triazole has been shown in laboratory studies to effectively control mycelial growth and provides local systemic protection 4 11 Risk of infection can also be reduced by delaying fall planting of garlic until temperatures fall below the 18 C optimal for S solani growth and good field sanitation 4 Importance editWith the development of resistant cultivars in of the major crops impacted by this pathogen the importance of S solani has been largely mitigated However as new strains emerge continued outbreaks in new crops may continue to cause significant damage and demand a response For example the migration of S solani into the Chinese garlic crop resulted in a 30 average yield loss between 2004 and 2008 with some fields sustaining 70 loss 12 Similarly epidemics in cotton have been reported in Brazil and India resulting in 100 crop loss in India 13 Geography edit Stemphylium solani is found throughout the world It was first by described by George Weber in 1930 in Florida United States It has since been reported in Brazil Venezuela India South Africa Spain Australia Egypt and China 4 5 Related pathogens and diagnosis edit Though 33 species of Stemphylium have been recognized many are saprophytic However S botryosum S globuliferum S herbarum S alfalfae and S vesicarium all cause agricultural damage including leaf spot in alfalfa and red clover purple spot in asparagus and leaf spot in garlic and onions 14 S veicarium has historically been the causal agent for leaf spot in garlic and onions but since the late 1990s S solani has also been shown to be pathogenic to alliums and a significant cause of disease in Chinese garlic crops Diagnosis of specific species is determined based on distinct conidia and conidiophore morphology though significant overlap in characteristics makes identification difficult DNA studies are currently the most conclusive method of correctly distinguishing species of Stemphylium 12 In addition to other strains of Stemphyllium symptoms caused by S solani can also be easily mistaken for Alternaria porri and Septoria Leaf Spot 1 2 References edit a b c d Lu Zheng et al Host Range and Phytotoxicity of Stemphylium Solani Causing Leaf Blight of Garlic Allium Sativum in China European Journal of Plant Pathology 124 no 1 October 21 2008 21 30 a b c John P Damicone and Lynn Brandenberger Common Diseases of Tomatoes Part I Diseases Caused by Fungi Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service n d a b L Cedeno and C Carrero First Report of Tomato Gray Leaf Spot Caused by Stemphylium Solani in the Andes Region of Venezuela Plant Disease 81 no 11 November 1 1997 1332 1332 a b c d e Lu Zheng et al Integrated Control of Garlic Leaf Blight Caused by Stemphylium Solani in China Canadian Journal of Plant Pathology 32 no 2 June 2 2010 135 145 a b c Y R Mehta Genetic Diversity Among Isolates of Stemphylium Solani from Cotton Dennis Pittenger et al Growing Tomatoes in the Home Garden University of California 2005 Gene McAvoy Grower s IPM Guide for Florida Tomato and Pepper Production Integrated Pest Management and Florida Tomatoes A Success Story in Progress University of Florida Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences January 2008 http ipm ifas ufl edu resources success stories T amp PGuide index shtml Esther Bashi M Pilowsky and J Rotem Resistance in Tomatoes to Stemphylium Floridanum and S Botryosum F Sp Lycopersici Phytopathology 63 no 12 December 1973 1542 1544 Stemphyllium solani Labrinos J L and F W Jr Nutter Effects of a Protectant Versus a Systemic Fungicide on Disease Components of Peanut Late Leaf Spot Plant Disease 77 no 8 1993 837 845 Daren Mueller Fungicides Triazoles Integrated Crop Management Integrated Crop Management November 9 2006 http www ipm iastate edu ipm icm 2006 5 30 fungicides html a b L Zheng J Huang and T Hsiang First Report of Leaf Blight of Garlic Allium Sativum Caused by Stemphylium Solani in China Plant Pathology 57 no 2 2008 380 380 Y R Mehta Plant Disease 82 1998 333 Marcos P S Camara Nichole R O Neill and Peter van Berkum Phylogeny of Stemphylium Spp Based on ITS and Glyceraldehyde 3 phosphate Dehydrogenase Gene Sequences Mycologia 94 no 4 August 2002 660 672 External links editIndex Fungorum USDA ARS Fungal Database Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Stemphylium solani amp oldid 1224586824, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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