The pathogenic diversity and host range of Colletotrichum spp. causing pepper spot and anthracnose of lychee (Litchi chinensis) in Australia

Lychee pepper spot, a field disease affecting lychee fruit skin, pedicels and petioles, is caused by Colletotrichum siamense, a fungal pathogen within the gloeosporioides species complex. Members of Colletotrichum from the gloeosporioides species complex and occasionally those from the acutatum spec...

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Veröffentlicht in:Plant pathology 2024-08, Vol.73 (6), p.1334-1348
Hauptverfasser: Anderson, Jay M., Coates, Lindy M., Aitken, Elizabeth A. B., Mitchell, Roger W., McTaggart, Alistair R., Dann, Elizabeth K.
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container_issue 6
container_start_page 1334
container_title Plant pathology
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creator Anderson, Jay M.
Coates, Lindy M.
Aitken, Elizabeth A. B.
Mitchell, Roger W.
McTaggart, Alistair R.
Dann, Elizabeth K.
description Lychee pepper spot, a field disease affecting lychee fruit skin, pedicels and petioles, is caused by Colletotrichum siamense, a fungal pathogen within the gloeosporioides species complex. Members of Colletotrichum from the gloeosporioides species complex and occasionally those from the acutatum species complex also cause postharvest anthracnose of lychee. Pepper spot was first described in Australia many years after anthracnose on lychee was first described, giving rise to the hypothesis that a novel species or strain within the gloeosporioides species complex causes pepper spot. In the present study, 19 isolates of Colletotrichum spp., collected from pepper spot and anthracnose symptoms on lychee fruit, representing 13 different genotypes across five species, were inoculated onto lychee fruit in the field or on detached fruit in the laboratory, to understand more about their pathogenic diversity. We found that symptoms were specific to genotype of the pathogen, as three genetically similar isolates of C. siamense consistently caused pepper spot and anthracnose, whilst other isolates caused anthracnose only. Cross‐inoculation studies on detached fruit of lychee, banana, avocado and mango also provided some evidence of host specialization in isolates of C. siamense infecting lychee in Australia. Our experiments provided further evidence that detached fruit assays cannot be used as a reliable proxy for field inoculation studies. This research confirms that C. siamense is a causal agent of both lychee pepper spot and lychee anthracnose in Australia, and Colletotrichum alienum and Colletotrichum queenslandicum are reported as causal agents of anthracnose of lychee for the first time. Pathogenicity on lychee and population genomics show that taxa in the gloeosporioides species complex are predominantly clonal, and symptoms and host range are linked to genotype.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/ppa.13901
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Our experiments provided further evidence that detached fruit assays cannot be used as a reliable proxy for field inoculation studies. This research confirms that C. siamense is a causal agent of both lychee pepper spot and lychee anthracnose in Australia, and Colletotrichum alienum and Colletotrichum queenslandicum are reported as causal agents of anthracnose of lychee for the first time. 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subjects Anthracnose
Australia
avocados
bananas
Colletotrichum
Colletotrichum queenslandicum
Colletotrichum siamense
Detaching
Fruits
fungi
genetic similarity
genotype
Genotypes
gloeosporioides species complex
Host range
host specialization
Inoculation
Litchi chinensis
litchis
mangoes
Pathogens
pepper
pepper spot
Plant diseases
plant pathology
Signs and symptoms
species
Spot
Vegetables
title The pathogenic diversity and host range of Colletotrichum spp. causing pepper spot and anthracnose of lychee (Litchi chinensis) in Australia
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