May
2005
, Volume
89
, Number
5
Pages
491
-
496
Authors
Levente
Kiss
,
Plant Protection Institute of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, H-1525 Budapest, P.O. Box 102, Hungary
;
Susumu
Takamatsu
,
Laboratory of Plant Pathology, Faculty of Bioresources, Mie University, Tsu 514-8507, Japan
; and
James H.
Cunnington
,
Department of Primary Industries - Knoxfield, Private Bag 15, Ferntree Gully Delivery Centre, Victoria, 3156, Australia
Affiliations
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RelatedArticle
Accepted for publication 29 December 2004.
Abstract
ABSTRACT
A previous morphological study of Oidium anamorphs responsible for the recent tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum) powdery mildew outbreaks worldwide suggested that, despite controversial data in the literature, the North American epidemics were caused solely by a newly erected species, O. neolycopersici. We report here the first molecular evidence that the North American anamorphs do belong to O. neolycopersici. The internal transcribed spacer sequences of the North American anamorphs of this study were identical with those of three Japanese and four European specimens of O. neolycopersici. A morphological study confirmed that all the North American Oidium anamorphs included in this study produced conidia singly, similar to O. neolycopersici. These fungi were readily distinguished from O. lycopersici, which produces conidia in chains and is known to infect tomato only in Australia. The phylogenetic analysis showed that O. neolycopersici is a distinct powdery mildew species, and it is neither identical nor closely related to any known polyphagous species of the Erysiphaceae. Apparently, it was introduced into the United States and Canada only in the 1990s, but its origin is still unknown.
JnArticleKeywords
Additional keywords:
Erysiphe sp.
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© 2005 The American Phytopathological Society