Abstract

During the spring of 2004, bitterroot (Lewisia cotyledon (S. Wats.) B.L. Robins), a flowering perennial of interest for rock gardens, showed symptoms of a wilt disease in several commercial nurseries located in Piedmont (northern Italy). Ten to thirty percent of plants from several different nurseries were affected. Wilted plants were first observed approximately 20 days after being transplanted into containers when outside temperatures ranged from 15 to 22°C. Symptomatic plants were stunted with yellowed leaves and brown-to-black veins. The vascular browning extended into the crown and was continuous with a brown discoloration in the vascular system of the crown and upper taproot. Fusarium oxysporum, identified on the basis of colony and conidia morphology (1), was consistently and readily isolated from symptomatic vascular tissue onto a Fusarium-selective medium (2). Three isolates were transferred to casein hydrolysate and grown for 10 days to produce conidial inoculum. Healthy 30-day-old plants were inoculated by dipping roots into a (1 × 106 CFU/ml) conidial suspension. Plants were then transplanted into pots filled with steam-sterilized soil. Noninoculated plants served as a control. Plants (12 per treatment) were placed in a climatic chamber at 25°C. Wilt symptoms and vascular discoloration in the roots, crown, and veins developed within 20 days on each inoculated plant, while noninoculated plants remained healthy. F. oxysporum was consistently reisolated from symptomatic plants. The pathogenicity test was conducted twice with the same result. One isolate of the pathogen has been deposited in the ATCC culture collection. To our knowledge, this is the first report of F. oxysporum on L. cotyledon in Italy and elsewhere in the world. Currently, this disease is present in several nurseries in the Piedmont Region of Italy.

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