Authors
A. R.
Ureña-Padilla
,
University of Florida, Gulf Coast Research and Education Center, 13138 Lewis Gallagher Road, Dover 33527
;
D. J.
Mitchell
,
University of Florida, Department of Plant Pathology, P.O. Box 110680, Gainesville 32611
; and
D. E.
Legard
,
University of Florida, Gulf Coast Research and Education Center, 13138 Lewis Gallagher Road, Dover 33527
ABSTRACT
The oversummer survival of Colletotrichum gloeosporioides in strawberry crown tissue under field conditions was investigated in 1998 and 1999. Strawberry crowns infected naturally with C. gloeosporioides were placed inside cloth bags containing field soil, buried in the field at 5 or 13 cm, then recovered over 6 months of each year. The recovered crowns were plated onto a Colletotrichum spp. semiselective medium and speciated by colony, spore morphology, and molecular markers with species-specific DNA primers. Pathogenicity of selected isolates was confirmed by greenhouse bioassays on strawberry. Of the 428 isolates of Colletotrichum spp. recovered from buried crowns, 96% were C. gloeosporioides and 4% Colletotrichum acutatum. Following an initial increase in the detection of the fungus, survival of C. gloeosporioides was stable for 2 to 3 weeks, then declined. No Colletotrichum spp. were detected after burial for 56 days in 1998 and 98 days in 1999. Because the time between crop seasons is typically more than 170 days, these data support the hypothesis that inoculum of C. gloeosporioides does not survive in buried plant debris between seasons in Florida and, therefore, oversummering crop debris does not contribute inoculum for epidemics of Colletotrichum crown rot in Florida.