New Records for Powdery Mildews and Taphrina Species in Idaho and Washington

New Records for Powdery Mildews and Taphrina Species in Idaho and Washington

Pacific Northwest Fungi Volume 2, Number 8, Pages 1-5 Published December 15, 2007 New records for powdery mildews and Taphrina species in Idaho and Washington Frank M. Dugan1 and George Newcombe2 1USDA-ARS Plant Germplasm Introduction and Testing Research Unit, Washington State University, Pullman, WA 99164-6402 2College of Natural Resources, University of Idaho, Moscow, ID 83844-1133 Dugan, F. M., and G. Newcombe. 2007. New records for powdery mildews and Taphrina species in Idaho and Washington. Pacific Northwest Fungi 2(8): 1-5. doi: 10.2509/pnwf.2007.002.008 Corresponding author, Frank M. Dugan: [email protected]. Accepted for publication December 7, 2007. http://pnwfungi.org Copyright © 2007 Pacific Northwest Fungi Project. All rights reserved. Abstract: Podosphaera (Sphaerotheca) euphorbiae on Euphorbia epithymoides (= E. polychroma, cushion spurge) is reported for the first time in North America. Neoerysiphe (Erysiphe) galeopsidis on Lamium amplexicaule (henbit), Blumeria (Erysiphe) graminis on Festuca idahoenis (Idaho fescue), Taphrina johansonii on Populus tremuloides (trembling aspen), and Taphrina occidentalis on Alnus rubra (red alder) are reported for the first time from Idaho. Reports of Erysiphe cichoracearum on henbit may reflect misdetermined Neoerysiphe galeopsidis. Key words: Alnus rubra, Blumeria graminis, cushion spurge, Erysiphe cichoracearum, Erysiphe galeopsidis, Erysiphe graminis, Euphorbia epithymoides, Euphorbia polychroma, Festuca idahoenis, henbit, Idaho fescue, Lamium amplexicaule, Neoerysiphe galeopsidis, Podosphaeara euphorbiae, Populus tremuloides, red alder, Sphaerotheca euphorbiae, Taphrina johansonii, Taphrina occidentalis, trembling aspen. Introduction: New fungus-host records are of routine diagnoses. Below are such new records for interest to plant disease diagnosticians, economically important plants, including a agricultural extension agents, Master Gardeners, popular ornamental shrub, a cosmopolitan weed, regulatory officials, and other plant health a forage grass common in the inland Pacific professionals. Documenting particular fungus- Northwest, and two forest trees often abundant in host occurrences in geographic locales where mesic or riparian environments. they were previously unrecorded assists in 2 Dugan and Newcombe. New records for powdery mildews and Taphrina species 2(8): 1-5 Materials and methods: Observations of produces conidia singly, as does Ovulariopsis microscopic characters of powdery mildews were erysiphoides Rat. & Har. Species in Leveillula made and photomicrographs taken with an form conidia with morphology differing strongly Olympus BH2 research microscope equipped from those in our specimens. Oidium cyparissiae with an Olympus DP11 digital camera. Syd. forms conidia much larger than those of our Observations of microscopic characters of specimens (and conidia of O. erysiphoides are Taphrina spp. were made with a Zeiss much larger as well, and clavate). Of the other Axioscope. Microscopic structures were two species in Sphaerotheca, S. euphorbiae- measured at ca. 100-1000x while mounted in helioscopiae S. Tanda & Y. Nomura, is reported distilled water (for spore measurements), lactic only from Japan, with only the teleomorph acid (for other structures) or air (for chains of described by Braun; and S. euphorbiae-hirtae U. conidia). One percent aniline blue in lactic acid Braun & R.B. Somani produces conidia larger than was applied directly to whole mounts of leaves those of our specimens and appears more for staining of haustoria within host tissue; restricted in host and geographic range than P. photographs were taken immediately after euphorbiae. Podosphaera euphorbiae has been application of stain. Fungi were identified twice reported (as S. euphorbiae) from E. according to the monographs of Braun (1987), epithymoides in Romania (Farr et al. n.d.). The Mix (1949) or Ray (1939). Powdery mildew powdery mildew most frequently reported from genus concepts follow Braun et al., (2002). Euphorbia spp. in North America is M. Hosts were identified according to DiTomaso euphorbiae (Farr et al. n.d.), which in addition to and Healy (2007), Hitchcock and Cronquist the formation of single conidia mentioned above, (1973), or in the case of cushion spurge, by the exhibits foot cells far shorter than those in our staff of Lawson Gardens, Pullman, WA. specimens or those given for S. euphorbiae. Specimens were deposited with the Mycological Braun (1987) examined the type of M. euphorbiae Herbarium of Department of Plant Pathology, and confirmed its conidia as forming singly, so our Washington State University, Pullman (WSP) or specimen differs from that species. Euphorbia the Stillinger Herbarium at University of Idaho epithymoides is a popular ornamental plant (ID). Details on collectors, dates and location of advertised on many web sites, usually as its samples are provided below. synonym, E. polychroma. As of this writing (20 September 2007), the primary host-fungus Podosphaera euphorbiae (Castagne) U. database for North America (Farr et al. n.d.) Braun & S. Takam. [≡Sphaerotheca contained numerous records for P. euphorbiae euphorbiae (Castagne) E.S. Salmon] on (many as S. euphorbiae) on Euphorbia spp. and Euphorbia epithymoides L. (= E. other hosts, mostly from Europe, but none for polychroma A. Kerner, cushion spurge), North America. Lawson Gardens, Pullman, Whitman Co., Washington USA, 20 June 2007, collector Neoerysiphe galeopsidis (DC.) U. Braun (≡ F.M. Dugan. Conidia with fibrosin bodies (Fig. Erysiphe galeopsidis DC.) on Lamium 1) were (20-)23-31 x (11-)12-14 μm; born in amplexicaule L. (henbit), University of chains (Fig. 2) on conidiophores with foot cells Idaho Arboretum, Moscow, Latah Co., 31-76 x 9-10 μm and with 2-3 cells in addition to Idaho USA, 18 June 2007, collector F.M. the foot cell. Appressoria (Fig. 3) were Dugan. Conidia lacking fibrosin bodies (Fig. 4) inconspicuous, slightly lobed. The teleomorph were 24-36.5 x 13-21 μm; born in chains (Fig. 5) was not seen. Braun (1987) described mycelium on conidiophores with foot cells 22-46 x 8-9 μm of P. euphorbiae (as S. euphorbiae) as and with 2-4 cells in addition to the foot cell. amphigenous on leaves, but in our specimens Appressoria (Fig. 6) were moderately lobed. The mycelium was mostly adaxial (dorsal). amphigenous, powdery white colonies of the Tortuous, brown, pannose mycelium was anamorph were often densely distributed on present as described by Braun, but hyphae were leaves and stems, but the teleomorph was not not as thick-walled as illustrated in Braun's seen. This fungus-host combination was figure. A specimen has been deposited as WSP previously reported from Washington State 71385. (Glawe n.d.); it was collected by Charles Gardiner Shaw, and is represented in WSP as specimen Of the several species described from number 23739. This fungus is reported on henbit Euphorbiaceae in Braun's (1987) world from numerous locales in Europe, and in the monograph, those in Erysiphe lack fibrosin United States is also reported on various Stachys bodies, Microsphaera euphorbiae Berk. & Curt. spp. (Farr et al. n.d.). Erysiphe cichoracearum Dugan and Newcombe. New records for powdery mildews and Taphrina species 2(8): 1-5 3 DC. [current name, Golovinomyces This disease of female capsules has been reported cichoracearum (DC.) Heluta] is the name most on P. tremuloides in various states across the U.S. commonly applied to powdery mildew on henbit (Farr et al.), but not previously from Idaho. Callan in the United States (California, Kansas, (1998) reported Taphrina populina Fries on P. Oklahoma, and South Carolina) (Farr et al. n.d.). tremuloides in British Columbia, but the This binomial has been applied to a very broad dimensions she provided for asci, precisely range of powdery mildews in the past, many now congruent with Mix (1949), are shorter than those segregated from G. cichoracearum (Braun of our specimen, and the symptoms were 1987). We have not examined specimens deformations of leaves (as opposed to deformation reported on henbit as E. cichoracearum, but it is of catkins). Rodrigues and Fonseca (2003) also worth noting that Braun (1987) restricted E. noted this difference in symptoms, although T. cichoracearum to hosts in the Asteraceae. Foot johansonii and T. populina clustered closely cells of E. cichoracearum are given by Braun as together in their phylogenetic analysis. Occurring mostly 50-80 μm long, and conidia as up to 5 each spring during the past three years in μm longer than in our specimens, so our Moscow, the disease has varied in severity among specimens are incongruent with E. female trees. cichoracearum on morphological grounds and by host range. Within the United States, we Taphrina occidentalis W.W. Ray on Alnus believe this to be the first report of N. rubra Bongard (red alder), confluence of galeopsidis on henbit outside Washington State, Selway River and O’Hara Creek, Idaho Co., but given the ambiguity of the reports involving Idaho USA, 11 Aug. 2007, collector G. E. cichoracearum, and given the reports from Newcombe. Bracts of female catkins of A. rubra Europe above, it is possible that N. galeopsidis is were red, and hypertrophied (Fig. 10). Cylindrical more widely distributed in North America. A asci of T. occidentalis were 37-50 µm long and 10- specimen has been deposited as WSP 71386. 18 µm wide, with basal cells. A specimen has been deposited in the Stillinger Herbarium as ID Blumeria graminis (DC.) Speer (≡ 139,486. Erysiphe graminis DC.) on Festuca idahoensis Elmer (Idaho

View Full Text

Details

  • File Type
    pdf
  • Upload Time
    -
  • Content Languages
    English
  • Upload User
    Anonymous/Not logged-in
  • File Pages
    5 Page
  • File Size
    -

Download

Channel Download Status
Express Download Enable

Copyright

We respect the copyrights and intellectual property rights of all users. All uploaded documents are either original works of the uploader or authorized works of the rightful owners.

  • Not to be reproduced or distributed without explicit permission.
  • Not used for commercial purposes outside of approved use cases.
  • Not used to infringe on the rights of the original creators.
  • If you believe any content infringes your copyright, please contact us immediately.

Support

For help with questions, suggestions, or problems, please contact us