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First Report of Phytophthora syringae Causing Rot on Apples in Cold Storage in the United States

June 2002 , Volume 86 , Number  6
Pages  693.2 - 693.2

R. A. Spotts , Mid-Columbia Agricultural Research and Extension Center, Hood River, OR 97031 ; and G. G. Grove , Washington State University Irrigated Agriculture Research and Extension Center, Prosser, WA 99350



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Accepted for publication 5 April 2002.

A decay of ‘Granny Smith’ apples (Malus domestica Borkh.) was observed in 1988, 1990, and 1991 on fruit grown in the lower Hood River Valley of Oregon and stored at 0°C. Harvested fruit were drenched with thiabendazole and stored in October in all years. In mid-November, fruit were sized, drenched with sodium hypochlorite, and returned to cold storage. Decay was observed in January when fruit were removed from cold storage, sorted, and packed. Decayed areas were light brown and firm with a slightly indefinite margin. Losses were less than 1% of fruit packed. Diseased fruit were surface-disinfested with 95% ethanol, and tissue pieces were transferred aseptically to potato dextrose agar acidified with lactic acid and incubated at approximately 22°C. The fungus consistently isolated was identified as Phytophthora syringae (Kleb.) Kleb. based on morphological characters (3). Sporangia were persistent and averaged 60 μm long (range 59 to 69) × 40 μm wide (range 37 to 43). Antheridia were paragynous, and oospores averaged 37 μm (range 31 to 46). ‘Golden Delicious’, ‘Granny Smith’, and ‘Gala’ apples were inoculated with mycelial plugs from a 7-day-old culture of P. syringae and incubated 12 days at 5°C and 7 to 12 days at 22°C. Twenty fruit of each cultivar were used—ten were inoculated, and ten uninoculated fruit served as controls. Lesions developed on all inoculated fruit but not on uninoculated controls. Lesions were spherical, chocolate brown, and firm with no evidence of external mycelia. Lesion morphology was similar on all cultivars. P. syringae was reisolated from lesion margins of all infected fruit. This postharvest decay of apples has not been observed in the Hood River Valley since 1991. Fruit rot of apples caused by P. syringae is known in Canada (1) and is common in the United Kingdom (2), but has not been reported previously in the United States. To our knowledge, this is the first report of postharvest decay of apples by P. syringae in the United States.

References: (1) R. G. Ross and C. O. Gourley. Can. Plant Dis. Surv. 49:33, 1969. (2) A. L. Snowdon. A Color Atlas of Postharvest Diseases. CRC Press, Inc., Boca Raton, FL, 1990. (3) G. M. Waterhouse. The Genus Phytophthora. Misc. Publ. 12. The Commonwealth Mycological Institute, Kew, Surrey, England, 1956.



© 2002 The American Phytopathological Society