Abstract

Daylily (Hemerocallis citrina Baroni) is a perennial herb whose flowers are commonly used in traditional Chinese cuisine. It is commercially cultivated in the Loess plateau of Gansu province, China. From July to October 2020, necrotic lesions were observed on the foliage of daylily plants in Huan County, Gansu, China, with an average disease incidence of 90%, and 52 to 86 disease index across four fields (approximate 6 hectares). Lesions were fusiform or nearly fusiform yellowish-brown spots of different sizes and a yellow irregular border. Older lesions were almost dark brown that often coalesced and expanded to cover the entire leaves. Thirty-four samples were collected from plants with typical foliar symptoms. Symptomatic tissues were excised from the margins of the lesions and sterilized with 75% ethanol for 20 s and 0.1% NaClO for 2 min, rinsed with sterilized water four times, dried on sterile paper towels, and cultured on Potato Dextrose Agar medium at 25°C for 7 days. A total of 34 fungal isolates with 100% isolation frequency were obtained and characterized. Colonies were white, becoming pale brown with age, reverse turned grayish black with age and irregular pale yellowish borders on the reverse side. Conidia (n=50) were hyaline, one-celled, subcylindrical with obtuse to slightly rounded ends, of 12-18.5×3.5-6 µm in size, (avg. 15.5×4.8 µm). The isolates were designated as K2010301 (51-54) and deposited in the Microbiological Culture Collection Center at College of Pastoral Agriculture Science and Technology, Lanzhou University (China). For fungal identification to species level, genomic DNA of a representative isolate (isolate MG) was extracted. Internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region, glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH), chitin synthase-1 (CHS-1) and beta-tubulin (TUB2) were amplified using V9G/ITS4, GDF1/GDR1, CHS-354R/CHS-79F, and T1/Bt-2b primer sets (Damm et al., 2012), respectively, and deposited in GenBank under accession numbers MW811458, MW836582, MW836581, and MW836584. BLASTn showed higher than 99% identity with Colletotrichum siamense (GenBank: KP703350 (ITS), MN884050 (GAPDH), MN894598 (CHS-1), and KX578815 (TUB2)). A Bayesian inference analysis of the four concatenated loci showed that isolate MG grouped in the C. siamense clade. Pathogenicity tests were performed by spraying a spore suspension (1×105 conidia/mL) of a 10-day-old culture of isolate "MG" onto 3 healthy and asymptomatic daylily plants. Three control plants were only sprayed with the same volume of sterile distilled water. The inoculated plants were covered with black plastic bags for 2 days to maintain high relative humidity. Anthracnose symptoms resembling those observed in the field developed after 7 days on all inoculated plants, while no symptoms were observed on the control plants. The fungus was reisolated and identified as C. siamense based on morphological features and DNA sequence analysis, fulfilling Koch's postulates. It has been demonstrated that C. liliacearum (Zhuang, 2005), C. gloeosporioides, and C. spaethianum (Yang et al., 2012) are anthracnose pathogens of H. citrina. To our knowledge, this is the first report of C. siamense causing daylily anthracnose worldwide. This fungal pathogen represents a severe threat and has the potential to cause yield losses of daylily, so further studies should focus on epidemiology and effective management strategies of this disease.

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