New Guinea impatiens (Impatiens hawkeri) is a common ornamental crop usually planted in pots and planters, flower beds, home gardens, or parks in Taiwan. In June 2021, leaf spots on… Click to show full abstract
New Guinea impatiens (Impatiens hawkeri) is a common ornamental crop usually planted in pots and planters, flower beds, home gardens, or parks in Taiwan. In June 2021, leaf spots on 87.1% (27/31) of potted I. hawkeri plants on National Chung Hsing University (NCHU) campus were observed. Initially, tiny chlorotic leaf spots were found, which aged into brown to grayish white necrotic spots with reddish-purple margins. The necrotic spots enlarged, coalesced, and formed concentric rings. To isolate the pathogen, diseased leaves were surface-disinfected with 70% ethanol for 15 seconds and blotted dry with a paper towel. Small pieces (~2×6 mm2) of tissues were excised from the junction of the lesions and healthy areas, placed onto 2% water agar, and incubated at 25°C with 12-h photoperiod for three days. Individual hyphal tips growing out of diseased tissues were transferred onto potato dextrose agar (PDA). Three isolates, OM10, OM43, and OM45, were obtained and grown on half-strength PDA at 28°C in the dark for at least two weeks. Conidia of each isolate produced on the half-strength PDA were washed off in sterile water with 0.01% of Tween 20. Pathogenicity tests were performed by spraying leaves of 2- to 3-month-old potted healthy I. hawkeri plants with 5 ml of conidial suspension (1 × 105 conidia/ml) of the three isolates, respectively. Control plants were sprayed with sterile water. There were four plants per treatment and the experiments were conducted twice. Inoculated plants were covered with plastic bags for two days and incubated in a greenhouse with a temperature range of 19 to 31°C. Leaf spots similar to those observed in the field were observed at 7 to 14 days after inoculation in both trials. The same fungus was isolated from inoculated plants, whereas control plants showed no symptoms. Thereafter, the three isolates were subjected to morphological and molecular identification. Colonies were brown to gray in the center and white in the border with abundant aerial mycelia. Conidia were brown, obclavate to ovoid, produced in single or branched chains, one to seven transverse and zero to three longitudinal septa. Conidial size of the three isolates ranged between 11.2 to 43.1 × 6.0 to 12.7 μm (n = 50 for each isolate). Conidiophores of the three isolates were dark-brown, septate, branched or unbranched, and measured 27.0 to 147.65 × 2.71 to 4.54 μm (n = 50 for each isolate). Based on the morphological characteristics, the three isolates were identified as Alternaria spp. (Simmons 2007). For molecular identification, the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region, RNA polymerase II second largest subunit (RPB2), glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH), and major allergen Alt-a-1 gene (Alt-a-1) were amplified using primer pairs ITS1/ITS4 (White et al. 1990), RPB2-5F2/RPB2-7cR (Sung et al. 2007), gpd1/gpd2 (Berbee et al. 1999), and Alt-for/Alt-rev (Hong et al. 2005), respectively. Sequence analyses of isolates OM10 (ITS: GenBank Accession no. OP358436; RPB2: OP377483; GAPDH: OP377468; Alt-a-1: OP377471), OM43 (ITS: OP358437; RPB2: OP377484; GAPDH: OP377469; Alt-a-1: OP377472), and OM45 (ITS: OP358438; RPB2: OP377485; GAPDH: OP377470; Alt-a-1: OP377473) showed 100%, 99.61 to 100%, 99.65%, and 100% identities with a reference strain CBS 107.38 of A. burnsii for ITS (KP124420), RPB2 (KP124889), GAPDH (JQ646305), and Alt-a-1 (KP123967), respectively. They also showed 100%, 99.61 to 100%, 99.65%, and 99.58% identities with an A. tomato strain CBS 103.30 for ITS (KP124445), RPB2 (KP124915), GAPDH (KP124294), and Alt-a-1 (KP123991), respectively. Based on the morphological and sequence characteristics, the pathogen causing New Guinea impatiens leaf spot was identified as a member of the Alternaria burnsii - A. tomato species complex. The diseased plants on NCHU campus were destroyed. There have been no reports of the disease in other landscape areas or nurseries. To our knowledge, this is the first report of A. burnsii - A. tomato species complex causing New Guinea impatiens leaf spot in Taiwan. Since the pathogens in the species complex have been documented causing diseases on several important economic crops and the New Guinea impatiens is widely planted in nurseries and landscapes, the host range and the significance of the pathogen in agro-ecosystem may warrant further investigations.
               
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