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First Report of Petiole Rot of Pulmonaria longifolia Caused by Sclerotium rolfsii var. delphinii

March 2003 , Volume 87 , Number  3
Pages  313.2 - 313.2

B. A. Edmunds and M. L. Gleason , Department of Plant Pathology, 351 Bessey Hall, Iowa State University, Ames 50011



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Accepted for publication 18 December 2002.

Sclerotium rolfsii var. delphinii was isolated from the bases of discolored petioles on wilted, yellow leaves of Pulmonaria longifolia (cultivar unknown), an herbaceous perennial growing in a landscape planting in Ames, IA. White mycelia and brick red, 2- to 3-mm-diameter sclerotia were found on affected tissue and nearby soil. The isolates were identified as S. rolfsii var. delphinii based on the formation of dark red, irregularly shaped, >2.0-mm-diameter sclerotia on potato dextrose agar (PDA) around the edge of the culture (1,2). Pathogenicity tests were conducted by inoculating 5-month-old P. longifolia cv. E. B. Anderson growing in 20-cm-diameter pots in a greenhouse at 25 to 30°C. Inoculum was produced by transferring plugs from a 1-week-old culture of the S. rolfsii var. delphinii isolate on PDA to autoclaved carrot disks. After 2 days of incubation, a mycelium-infested carrot disk was placed on the soil surface at the base of each plant. Six plants were inoculated and six plants served as uninoculated controls. All plants were enclosed in plastic bags to maintain high humidity. The pathogenicity test was repeated once. All inoculated plants developed characteristic symptoms within 10 days, whereas all control plants remained symptomless. Sclerotia developed on infected tissue and the media surface, and S. rolfsii var. delphinii was reisolated on PDA from symptomatic petioles. To our knowledge, this is the first report of petiole rot of P. longifolia caused by S. rolfsii var. delphinii.

References: (1) Z. K. Punja. Annu. Rev. Phytopathol. 23:97, 1985. (2) Z. K. Punja and A. Damiani. Mycologia 88(5):694, 1996.



© 2003 The American Phytopathological Society