Abstract

Dragon fruit (red skin and red fleshed, Hylocereus polyrhizus), newly introduced cactus plant in Mizoram, India, exhibited stem rot (35.38%) disease in established orchards during 2017–2018. Recorded symptoms included small red-brown spots encircled with yellowish halos. The size of the spots gradually enlarged and later the tissues turned completely watery and rotten. Fusarium species were consistently isolated from the stem rot tissues of red-fleshed dragon fruit. The pathogen associated with the stem rot disease was identified as Fusarium equiseti based on the morphological characters (production of abundant macroconidia, single-celled microconidia, and solitary and intercalary chlamydospores) and multigene phylogenetic analysis of internal transcribed spacer of ribosomal DNA (ITS-rDNA), translation elongation factor 1α (TEF-1) and beta-tubulin (TUB2). The phylogenetic trees showed that all isolates belonged to the F. equiseti, a member of Fusarium incarnatum-equiseti species complex (FIESC). Four isolates were tested for pathogenicity that produced the symptoms of stem rots (up to 57.64% severity) at 15 days after inoculation. Koch's postulate was further established by re-isolating the F. equiseti from artificially infected plants. To our best knowledge, this is the first report of F. equiseti as a pathogen causing the stem rot of dragon fruit (red-fleshed) in India.

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