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Identification and pathogenicity of Alternaria alternata causing leaf spot and blight disease of Ailanthus excelsa in India
Author(s) -
Kant Rama,
Joshi Pooja,
Bhandari Maneesh S.,
Pandey Amit,
Pandey Shailesh
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
forest pathology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.535
H-Index - 49
eISSN - 1439-0329
pISSN - 1437-4781
DOI - 10.1111/efp.12584
Subject(s) - biology , leaf spot , alternaria alternata , blight , spots , internal transcribed spacer , alternaria , conidium , botany , inoculation , horticulture , outbreak , ribosomal dna , ribosomal rna , phylogenetics , gene , biochemistry , virology
Alternaria leaf spot of Ailanthus excelsa is generally considered as minor disease in India. Recently, severe disease outbreaks were recorded in the nursery of the Forest Research Institute, Dehradun, progeny trial at Jhumpa, Haryana, and in a nearby farm field. Leaf symptoms included small circular, brown, necrotic spots with a chlorotic halo. With severe infections, leaf spots coalesced and resulted in leaf blight. A small‐spored Alternaria with concatenated conidia was isolated consistently from the leaf samples with spot symptoms. Sequence analyses of the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region of ribosomal DNA (rDNA) and the translation elongation factor 1‐alpha ( tef‐1α ) gene region of two fungal isolates confirmed the species as A. alternata . In detached leaf assays, both isolates produced symptoms similar to those observed on the nursery/field‐grown plants. To validate the detached leaf assay result, pathogenicity was also demonstrated on whole plants in a glasshouse. Koch's postulates were fulfilled by re‐isolating A. alternata from the inoculated leaves. This work is the first to confirm that A. alternata is associated with leaf spot and blight disease of A. excelsa in India.

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