Abstract

In July 2020, symptoms of crown and root rot were observed on about 10% of 4-month-old plants of industrial hemp Cannabis sativa cultivar Yunma-1 in Weifang City, Shandong Province in eastern China (Fig 1). During this month, the local temperature ranged from 19-32°C, and the total precipitation was 148mm. The disease symptoms included leaf chlorosis, crown and root rot, stunted growth, and wilting (Figs. 1 and 2). The diseased stem and root tissues were collected and cut into fragments of 0.5cm each. The fragments were surface-sterilized by dipping into 1% NaClO for 1 min, rinsed in sterile water and plated on potato dextrose agar (PDA) and on oomycetes-selective medium PARP (Jeffers and Martin 1986). The plates were incubated at 25°C in the dark for 3 days and 18 total single-hyphal purified isolates were obtained for further analyses with 8 from PDA and 10 from PARP. The colonies of all 18 isolates were white, had abundant aerial hyphae, and were cottony in appearance, resembling Pythium spp (Watanabe 2002). The grass-leaf method (Van Der Plaats-Niterink 1981) induced their sexual reproduction. The size and shape of hyphae, oogonia, antheridia, and oospores were all consistent with those of Pythium aphanidermatum (Fig 3). DNA was extracted from three isolates and their internal transcribed spacer (ITS) regions of rDNA were amplified and sequenced using the primers ITS1/ITS4 (White et al. 1990). The ITS sequences of all three isolates were identical to each other (GenBank accession OK091124.1) and showed a 100% query coverage and 99.88% nucleotide sequence identity with that of type strain of P. aphanidermatum (GenBank accession AY598622.2). Pathogenicity tests were performed with three isolates on hemp cultivar B1. Sterile substrates were prepared in 2L-pots containing peat soil and vermiculite in a 2:1 ratio, with test hemp plants grown from rooted stem cuttings. Plants were kept in a greenhouse at 22 to 27°C under 16 h photoperiod, watered every two days (about 200ml each time) and supplied commercial nutrient solution once a week. A month after transplanting to pots, a wound of 1 mm deep and 10 mm long (made by a sterilized needle) on the surface of the root crown area of the main stem was inoculated with an 8-mm-diameter agar disk of mycelia grown on PDA for 4 days. Six plants were tested for each isolate and three plants were inoculated with sterile agar medium without mycelia as negative controls. The experiment was repeated twice. After one month, plants inoculated with P. aphanidermatum isolates showed the same disease symptoms as observed on field plants while all negative control plants remained disease-free. P. aphanidermatum was reisolated from the diseased tissue and confirmed to be identical to those inoculated based on ITS sequencing and colony morphology. To our knowledge, this is the first report of P. aphanidermatum causing crown and root rot on hemp in China. With an estimated 66,700 hectares hemp cultivation in China producing over US$1 billion worth of hemp fiber (McGrath 2020), this pathogen represents a serious threat to the hemp industry. This pathogen has been reported on hemp in the US and Canada (Beckerman et al. 2017; Punja et al. 2018). The origin of P. aphanidermatum on hemp in China and its relationship to those in North America remain to be examined.

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