Corn-salad or lamb's lettuce (Valerianella locusta) is a specialty leafy green vegetable that is grown commercially in California and is harvested fresh for use in salads. In 2001, field plantings of corn-salad in coastal California showed symptoms and signs of a previously undescribed disease. Initial symptoms consisted of a light tan discoloration at the crown and lower leaf attachment areas. Once this discoloration was observed, the crown rapidly developed a soft rot, attached leaves wilted, and the entire plant collapsed. White mycelium and small (0.5 to 3.0 mm in diameter), irregularly shaped, black sclerotia formed on the crowns and lower leaves. Isolations from symptomatic crowns, mycelium, and sclerotia produced colonies of Sclerotinia minor (1). Seven-week-old corn-salad plants grown in a peat moss-based rooting medium in pots were used to test pathogenicity. Sclerotia from six corn-salad isolates from the Salinas Valley were inserted into slots made in the potting mix adjacent to the crowns of plants. Sclerotia were not placed in slots for control corn-salad. All test plants were incubated in a greenhouse at 21 to 23°C. After 4 weeks, inoculated corn-salad plants wilted and collapsed, and S. minor was reisolated from necrotic crown and stem tissues. Uninoculated plants were asymptomatic. Using the same method, sclerotia from one lettuce (Lactuca sativa) isolate were used to inoculate corn-salad plants that produced similar symptoms. All experiments were repeated and results were similar. To our knowledge, this is the first report of corn-salad as a host of S. minor in California and the United States. The susceptibility of corn-salad to S. minor from lettuce indicates that this crop might contribute to inoculum levels and lettuce drop incidence for the extensive lettuce plantings in the Salinas Valley.
Reference: (1) C. L. Patterson and R. G. Grogan. Plant Dis. 72:1046, 1988.