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Phytophthora cinnamomi as a Cause of Oak Mortality in the State of Colima, Mexico

April 2000 , Volume 84 , Number  4
Pages  394 - 398

F. H. Tainter , Department of Forest Resources, Clemson University, Clemson, SC 29634-0331 ; J. G. O'Brien , USDA Forest Service, 1992 Fowell Ave., St. Paul, MN 55108 ; A. Hernández , Secretaría de Medio Ambiente, Recursos Naturales y Pesca, Progreso No. 5, Col. de Carmen, Coyoacan, c.p. 04110, México, D.F ; F. Orozco , Secretaría de Medio Ambiente, Recursos Naturales y Pesca, Victoria No. 360, Colima, Colima, México ; and O. Rebolledo , Universidad de Colima, Tecoman, Colima, AP 36, México



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Accepted for publication 7 December 1999.
ABSTRACT

This research identifies the root pathogen Phytophthora cinnamomi as the primary cause of mortality in a 300-ha disease center of mixed oak trees in a native forest in southern Mexico. In increasing order of apparent field resistance to the disease, the major oak species are Quercus glaucoides, Q. peduncularis, and Q. salicifolia. P. cinnamomi was isolated from soil in the affected area from symptomatic trees and was successfully used to perform Koch's postulates on these three oak species. Artificial and natural infections produced vertically elongated discolorations in the outer xylem and distinctive phloem canker lesions with a sharp demarcation line between healthy and affected tissues. In Q. glaucoides there is little evidence that this oak species is able to resist the girdling effects of the phloem lesions, but in Q. peduncularis, and especially in Q. salicifolia, increased production of callus tissue around the phloem canker lesions suggests an active resistance mechanism that may allow these infected trees to survive somewhat longer. This particular incident is unlike other recent reports in other parts of the world of oak mortality caused by P. cinnamomi because the initial appearance of disease in this area is known (just prior to 1987), and it has subsequently expanded to the present area of 300 ha (in 1999) as a distinctive infection locus with periodically advancing infection fronts. This incident is also another dramatic illustration of the potential environmental damage that can result when P. cinnamomi is introduced into a simple forest ecosystem where the major overstory trees are susceptible to infection and are killed.


Additional keywords: introduced pathogen, root disease

© 2000 The American Phytopathological Society