Abstract

During 1994, damping-off of wild rice (Zizania palustris L.) in a single field in eastern Shasta County, CA resulted in near total stand failure. Since then, the disease was observed in at least 11 other fields with varying levels of stand loss. In all cases, the affected wild rice was grown as a volunteer crop following one or more years of wild rice production. Symptoms included a dark red discoloration and necrosis of the primary root followed by seedling death. When the red discoloration was limited to secondary roots, the plants often survived. Pythium torulosum, readily recovered from symptomatic roots by isolation on PARP media, was identified by morphological structures produced on grass blades in water (homothallic with smooth-walled oogonia, plerotic oospores, monoclinous antheridia, and inflated filamentous sporangia) and a 99.2% internal transcribed spacer sequence similarity of the rDNA (1). To complete Koch's postulates, inoculum of two isolates of P. torulosum grown on moistened cornmeal/sand (2%/98% [v/v]) for 3 weeks at 25°C were combined and mixed into sterilized sandy loam soil at a rate of 30 cm3 inoculum per liter of soil. Sterilized noninfested soil was used as a control treatment. Twenty wild rice seeds (cv. Franklin) were sown in each of four replicate 20-cm-diameter pots in each treatment. Plants were submerged in water and maintained in a greenhouse at 18 to 25°C. After 8 weeks, plants stands were reduced 50% in infested pots; dry weights of infected plants were reduced by 45% relative to the controls. The fungus was reisolated from symptomatic plants but not from the plants grown in noninfested soil. The experiment was repeated with similar results. To our knowledge, this is the first report of damping-off of wild rice caused by P. torulosum. Reference: (1) C. A. Levesque and W. A. M. DeCock. Mycol. Res. 108:1363, 2004.

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