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Characterization of Colletotrichum species responsible for anthracnose diseases of various fruits.

Stanley Freeman, +2 more
- 01 Jun 1998 - 
- Vol. 82, Iss: 6, pp 596-605
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TLDR
Methods used to identify and characterize Colletotrichum species and genotypes from almond, avocado, and strawberry, as examples are dealt with, using traditional and molecular tools.
Abstract
ilamentous fungi of the genus Colletotrichum and its teleomorph Glomerella are considered major plant pathogens worldwide. They cause significant economic damage to crops in tropical, subtropical, and temperate regions. Cereals, legumes, ornamentals, vegetables, and fruit trees may be seriously affected by the pathogen (3). Although many cultivated fruit crops are infected by Colletotrichum species, the most significant economic losses are incurred when the fruiting stage is attacked. Colletotrichum species cause typical disease symptoms known as anthracnose, characterized by sunken necrotic tissue where orange conidial masses are produced. Anthracnose diseases appear in both developing and mature plant tissues (4). Two distinct types of diseases occur: those affecting developing fruit in the field (preharvest) and those damaging mature fruit during storage (postharvest). The ability to cause latent or quiescent infections has grouped Colletotrichum among the most important postharvest pathogens. Species of the pathogen appear predominantly on aboveground plant tissues; however, belowground organs, such as roots and tubers, may also be affected. In this article, we deal in particular with methods used to identify and characterize Colletotrichum species and genotypes from almond, avocado, and strawberry, as examples, using traditional and molecular tools. The three pathosystems chosen represent different disease patterns of fruitassociated Colletotrichum. Multiple Species on a Single Host Numerous cases have been reported in which several Colletotrichum species or biotypes are associated with a single host. For example, avocado and mango anthracnose, caused by both C. acutatum and C. gloeosporioides, affect fruit predominantly as postharvest diseases (25,40,41). Strawberry may be infected by three Colletotrichum species, C. fragariae, C. acutatum, and C. gloeosporioides, causing anthracnose of fruit and other plant parts (31). Almond and other deciduous fruits may be infected by C. acutatum or C. gloeosporioides (Table 1) (1,5,46,50). Citrus can be affected by four different Colletotrichum diseases (61): postbloom fruit drop and key lime anthracnose, both caused by C. acutatum, and shoot dieback and leaf spot, and postharvest fruit decay, both caused by C. gloeosporioides. Additional examples of hosts affected by multiple Colletotrichum species include coffee, cucurbits, pepper, and tomato. Single Species on Multiple Hosts It is common to find that a single botanical species of Colletotrichum infects multiple hosts. For example, C. gloeosporioides (Penz.) Penz. & Sacc. in Penz. (teleomorph: Glomerella cingulata (Stoneman) Spauld. & H. Schrenk), which is considered a cumulative species and forms the sexual stage in some instances, is found on a wide variety of fruits, including almond, avocado, apple, and strawberry (Table 2) (6,15,31,46). Likewise, C. acutatum J.H. Simmonds has been reported to infect a large number of fruit crops, including avocado, strawberry, almond, apple, and peach (1,5,16,25,27). Examples of other species with multiple host ranges include C. coccodes, C. capsici, and C. dematium (14,56).

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Citations
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Journal Article

A polyphasic approach for studying Colletotrichum

TL;DR: This paper proposed a polyphasic approach to the recognition and identification of species within Colletotrichum, matching genetic distinctness with informative morphological and biological characters, including morphology, pathogenicity, physiology, phylogenetics and secondary metabolite production.
Journal ArticleDOI

Characterization and pathogenicity of Colletotrichum species associated with anthracnose on chilli (Capsicum spp.) in Thailand

TL;DR: Pathogenicity tests validated that all three species isolated from chilli were causal agents for chilli anthracnose when inoculated onto fruits of the susceptible Thai elite cultivar Capsicum annuum cv.
Journal ArticleDOI

Characterization of diversity in Colletotrichum acutatum sensu lato by sequence analysis of two gene introns, mtDNA and intron RFLPs, and mating compatibility

TL;DR: Mating compatibility was identified within one clade, C, and between two phylogenetically distinct clades, C and J4, suggesting that genetic isolation occurred before reproductive isolation.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Fungal vegetative compatibility

TL;DR: Heterokaryon fonnation between different fungal individuals is an important component of many fungal life cycles and may serve as the first step in the parasexual cycle and the transmission of hypovirulent factors such as dsRNAs.
Journal ArticleDOI

Classification of strains of Fusarium oxysporum on the basis of vegetative compatibility.

John E. Puhalla
- 01 Feb 1985 - 
TL;DR: Twenty-one strains of Fusarium oxysporum were classified on the basis of vegetative compatibility or the ability to form hetcrokaryons, and there was some evidence for a correlation between VCG and forma specialis.
Book

Colletotrichum: Biology, Pathology and Control

TL;DR: The genus glomerella and its anamorph colletotrichum, B.C.Dillard coffee berry disease - the current status, Dinah Masaba and J.M.J. Sutton sexuality and genetics fo collett richum, R.A. Redman lectin cytochemistry - a new approach to understanding cell differentiation, pathogenesis and taxonomy in colletOTrichum.
Journal ArticleDOI

Pathogen quiescence in postharvest diseases.

TL;DR: This chapter examines the quiescence period during different stages of fungal attack of postharvest pathogens: quyingcence during spore germination and initial hyphal development, during and after appressorium formation, and quiescent of germinated appressoria and subcuticular hyphae.
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