Abstract

Leaf yellowing and brown discoloration was observed in tobacco plants cv. Burley TN97 in tobacco fields of central Greece in 2002. Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. nicotianae was isolated from symptomatic plants and Koch's postulates were fulfilled. The pathogenicity of the isolated fungus was examined on five tobacco cultivars (Burley TN97, BurleyB21, VirginiaBE9, Virginia Niki and Anatolika KE26/2). The pathogen was present in tobacco seed batches imported in 2000 and 2001, which indicates that the infected seed is most probably the primary source of the disease in Greece. As Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. vasinfectum can also cause vascular wilt in tobacco, the hypothesis that the isolated F. oxysporum strain belongs to f. sp. vasinfectum was excluded by a pathogenicity test to cotton cv. Acala SJ-2. This is the first report of F. oxysporum f. sp. nicotianae in Greece and the second in the European Union, although the seedborne nature of the pathogen has not been previously reported in Europe.

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