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First Report of Charcoal Rot of Sugar Beet Caused by Macrophomina phaseolina in Greece

September 2002 , Volume 86 , Number  9
Pages  1,051.4 - 1,051.4

D. A. Karadimos , G. S. Karaoglanidis , and K. Klonari , Department of Agriculture, Plant Pathology Laboratory, Aristotelian University of Thessaloniki, P.O. Box 269, 54006, Thessaloniki, Greece



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Accepted for publication 12 June 2002.

During the summer of 2000 in the Amyndeon area of northern Greece, sugar beet (Beta vulgaris L.) roots with rot symptoms were observed in many fields. Initially, the plants wilted, and leaves soon turned brown and died. Diseased plants appeared in patches in the field. Brown-black lesions were observed in the external part of the root crown while yellow-mustard colored lesions occurred internally. In advanced stages of decay, masses of sclerotia formed in rotted cavities and roots became mummified. Macrophomina phaseolina (Tassi) Goid. (1) was isolated on potato dextrose agar (PDA) from 30 rotted roots collected in five fields. Cultures produced dark multi-septate mycelium and sclerotia, which were black, smooth, spherical to irregular in shape, and varied in size from 100 μm to 1mm in diameter. Five isolates were evaluated for pathogenicity on surface-sterilized 16-week-old sugar beet roots (cv. Rizor) by placing a 5-mm-diameter PDA plug of actively growing mycelium in wounds made with a sterile knife. Sterile PDA plugs were placed in wounds made in control beet roots. Ten roots were inoculated per isolate. Roots were kept at 25°C in the dark for 10 days. Extensive decay of inoculated roots developed, similar to decay observed in the field, and M. phaseolina was reisolated from rotted tissue. Control roots showed no decay. This pathogen has been previously reported as a root rot pathogen of sugar beet in California, India, and countries of the former USSR. Charcoal rot is of minor economic importance since M. phaseolina attacks mainly weakened plants under conditions of high temperature (2). To our knowledge, this is the first report of charcoal root rot of sugar beet in Greece.

References: (1) Anonymous. Macrophomina phaseolina. No. 275 in: Descriptions of Plant Pathogenic Fungi and Bacteria. CMI, Kew, Surrey, UK, 1970. (2) J. E. Duffus and E. G. Ruppel. Diseases. Page 347 in: The Sugar Beet Crop. Science into Practice. D. A. Cooke and R. K. Scott eds. Chapman and Hall, NY, 1993.



© 2002 The American Phytopathological Society