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The American Phytopathological Society
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First Report of Clubroot of Eruca sativa Caused by Plasmodiophora
brassicae in Brazil. M. L. Paz Lima and A. C. Café-Filho, Universidade
de Brasília, 70910-900, Brasília, DF, Brazil; N. L. Nogueira and
M. L. Rossi, CENA/ESALQ/USP, 13400-000, Piracicaba, São Paulo, Brazil; and L.
R. Schuta, Universidade Federal do Paraná, 72800-000, Curitiba, Paraná,
Brazil. Plant Dis. 88:573, 2004; published on-line as D-2004-0303-01N, 2004.
Accepted for publication 27 January 2004.
Eruca sativa Mill. (family Brassicaceae), with its origin in western Asia,
is a culinary and pharmacological species cultivated in Europe, Brazil, and
other countries. In the United States, it is a minor crop known as arugula or
roquette. Clubroot on E. sativa has not been reported in Brazil and has
been reported once in the United States in 1914 (1,2,3). On several occasions
since 2000, stunted and wilted plants (cv. Rúcula Cultivada) were collected
from growers’ fields and greenhouses that had been direct-seeded in Vargem
Bonita, DF (two fields and one greenhouse) and Quatro Barras, PR (two fields).
The infected arugula crops were found in areas where other plants from the genus
Brassica were traditionally cultivated. Disease incidence in individual
fields varied from 20 to 80%. Diseased plants were severely affected with
hypertrophic, malformed roots, and root galls resembling Woronin’s description
(4). Plasmodia and resting spores in thin sections prepared from root galls were
observed with compound and electron microscopes. Pathogenicity tests were
conducted on arugula and Brassica pekinensis (Lour.) Rupr. (universal
host) with inoculum from naturally infected arugula. The soil of potted test
plants at the four-to-five-leaf stage was drenched with a suspension of resting
spores. Symptoms identical to those observed on the original plants were
produced on all inoculated plants 2 to 3 weeks after inoculation. Control plants
remained symptomless. The pathogen was positively identified as Plasmodiophora
brassicae Wor. with the combination of macroscopic and microscopic symptoms
and signs of the disease and pathogen. P. brassicae was first reported in
Brazil in 1965 in the state of São Paulo and in the 1980s in Distrito Federal
on several members of the Brassicae. To our knowledge, this is the first report
of P. brassicae infecting E. sativa in Brazil. Arugula is a
susceptible host and should not be planted on P. brassicae-infested land.
References: (1) D. Farr et al. Fungi on Plants and Plant Products in the
United States. The American Phytopathological Society, St. Paul, MN. 1989. (2)
D. F. Farr et al. Fungal Databases. Systematic Botany and Mycology Laboratory,
On-line publication. ARS, USDA, 2003. (3) J. S. Karling. The Plasmodiophorales.
Published by J. S. karling, NY. 1942. (4) M. S. Woronin. Plasmodiophora
brassicae the Cause of Cabbage Hernia. Phytopathological Classics 4. The
American Phytopathological Society, Ithaca, NY, 1934.
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