Abstract

Coral trees (Viburnum odoratissimum), as a class of evergreen shrubs, are mainly planted in landscapes in numerous cities in China. During September 2020, the author investigated four major parks in Hefei (Bao Park, Hefei Botanical Garden, Luzhou Park and Peninsula Park) and the campus of Anhui Agricultural University (approximately 0.5 ha) (31°49'21.30″N, 117°13'18.25″E). The results showed that the incidence rate of leaf spot disease reached 60% among approximately 100,000 coral trees planted in these areas. Coral trees begin to show leaf spots in August. In early stages of coral trees infection, the symptoms appeared as small brown spots ranged in length from 2 to 3 millimeters on the leaves. After the disease patches expand and darken, the coral leaves eventually wither and fall, which seriously affects its viewing and admiring value. To identify the fungal pathogen, the five-point sampling method was used to take typical similar leaf samples from 5 regions, and 6 samples were taken from each site, so a total of 150 samples were obtained. Fragments of sample leaves were surface-sterilized with 1% NaClO, plated on potato dextrose agar, and incubated at 25 °C in the dark. A total of 275 strains were obtained from 150 samples. According to the morphological characteristics, 275 strains were purified and divided into four types. Four representative strains (MI1, K1, F1, D1) were selected from four types for further pathogenicity testing and identification. The pathogenicity test was conducted in triplicate by inoculating wounded leaves of 1-year-old potted V. odoratissimum with 20μL of a conidial suspension (106 conidia/mL). The control was inoculated with sterile water. The specimens were placed in a growth chamber while maintaining 90% relative humidity and 28℃. After five days, the characteristic lesions were observed only on inoculated MI1 spore suspension leaves. The same fungus was reisolated from the lesions, thus fulfilling Koch's postulates. The pathogenic fungi accounted for 60% of all strains. Fungal colonies were circular and had abundant white aerial mycelium, and colonies changed from white to pure black after maturity. Conidia were fusiform (16-17×5-6 μm), thin-walled, transparent, and without diaphragms. Molecular identification was performed by partially sequencing the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) gene, the translation elongation Factor 1-alpha(EF1-alpha) gene, and the β-tubulin (TUB2) gene by using the primers ITS1/ITS4 (White et al. 1990), EF1-728F (Alves et al. 2008)/EF1-986R (Carbone & Kohn 1999), and Bt2a/Bt2b (Glass & Donaldson 1995), respectively. The obtained ITS sequence (MW767713) showed 99% identity with N. parvum CMW28429 (KU997429.1), the EF1-alpha sequence (MZ398261) showed 99% identity with N. parvum isolate A4 (FJ528597.1), and the TUB2 sequence (MZ398260) showed 99% identity with N. parvum isolate BO52 (KU554657.1). By combining the sequences of individual fragments of each fungus in the order ITS, EF1-alpha and TUB2, MEGA 6.0 was used to analyze the sequence of kinship by using the maximum likelihood method, and the repeat value of bootstraps was 1000. A polygenic phylogenetic tree analysis based on multilocus alignment (ITS, EF1-alpha and TUB2) was constructed with some strains of Botryosphaeriaceae species. The results of the phylogenetic tree showed that MI1 and N. parvum clustered into a branch. To our knowledge, this is the first report of N. parvum causing leaf spot on V. odoratissimum in China.

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