Authors
P.
Harmon
,
K.
Rane
,
G.
Ruhl
, and
R.
Latin
,
Department of Botany and Plant Pathology, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN 47907-1155
Pyricularia grisea, the causal agent of gray leaf spot on turfgrass, was isolated from symptomatic perennial ryegrass (Lolium perenne) leaves collected from a golf course in north-central Indiana in August 1999. Gray leaf spot is an emerging threat to stands of perennial ryegrass in the mid-Atlantic and Midwestern United States (1). Symptoms were first evident in taller (6 cm) mown, rough areas surrounding golf course fairways. Field symptoms included diffuse patches (1 to 4 m in diameter) of thin, yellow-tan turf. Within larger affected areas, some of the turf was dead and matted. Close inspection revealed the presence of typical tan-gray lesions with brown margins and fish hook-like distortion of infected leaf blade tips. Incubation of affected turf in a saturated environment at 23°C for 16 h resulted in production of numerous three-celled, pear-shaped conidia characteristic of those produced by P. grisea. A pure culture of the isolate was grown on V8-juice agar in darkness at 29°C. After 10 days, the culture was exposed to continuous light for 4 days at 23°C to induce sporulation. Conidia were washed from the colony surface with sterile distilled water. Two-week-old perennial ryegrass plants in 8-cm-diameter pots were inoculated with the conidial suspension. Typical gray leaf spot symptoms resulted after incubation of inoculated plants at 27°C for 72 h in a saturated atmosphere. Uninoculated control plants exposed to the same environmental conditions remained healthy. This is the first report of gray leaf spot on perennial ryegrass in Indiana.
Reference: (1) P. J. Landschoot and B. F. Hoyland. Plant Dis. 76:1280, 1992.