Abstract

In March 2001, a foliar bacterial disease was observed on gramma seedlings (Cucurbita moschata L.) cv. Ken Special Hybrid 864 in a commercial nursery in Bowen, north Queensland, Australia. Symptoms included chlorosis of cotyledons and angular, water-soaked lesions from the tips of the cotyledons to the petioles. Brown, angular, water-soaked lesions that were delimited by the leaf veins were also present on newly emerged true leaves. Streaming of bacterial cells from the edges of cut lesions was seen in a droplet of water with ×100 magnification. Isolations attempted on King's medium B consistently yielded a slow-growing, cream to white, gram-negative bacterium. Bacterium was identified as Acidovorax avenae subsp. citrulli based on carbon source utilization profiles (Biolog, Hayward CA) and polymerase chain reaction (PCR) using a primer pair based on the 16S-23S internal transcribed spacer region. When tested in rep-PCR with the BoxA1R primer (2), the isolate produced a banding pattern similar to other Australian A. avenae subsp. citrulli isolates previously shown to be pathogenic to rockmelon (1). Koch's postulates were completed with 20 2-week-old glasshouse-grown gramma (cv. Ken Special Hybrid 864) seedlings. Seedlings were misted until runoff with a 3 × 108 CFU/ml bacterial suspension and enclosed in plastic bags for 48 h at 23°C. Water-soaked lesions developed on cotyledons of all seedlings 6 days after inoculation, and bacterium was reisolated from symptomatic tissue. To our knowledge, this is the first report of A. avenae subsp. citrulli as a pathogen of C. moschata

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