Abstract

Pseudomonas syringae pv. tomato has been observed in the fields in Sinaloa causing typical symptoms of bacterial speck. During the 2004–2005 growing seasons atypical symptoms were observed in tomato varieties grown in Sinaloa, consisting of external necrosis of stems, petioles, peduncles and fruit calyxes. Although the disease affected 80–90% of the foliage, there were no speck symptoms on fruit. The objectives of this study were to: (a) identify the causal agent of the disease, (b) determine the sensitivity of the pathogen to various antibiotics in vitro and (c) test their efficacy for controlling the disease in tomato plants under greenhouse conditions. The results of the present study indicate that biochemical and physiological characteristics as well as the molecular studies of bacterial isolates associated with the yellow halo spot and external necrosis of the stem of tomato are closely related to P. syringae pv. tomato, although whether these isolates indeed belong to pathovar tomato needs further assessment. The efficacy of gentamicin sulfate and oxytetracycline chlorhydrate in vitro, and in planta under greenhouse conditions, represents a possible option for the chemical control of the disease under field conditions. The results also indicate a reduced sensitivity of the characterized isolates to copper hydroxide as compared with the above mentioned antibiotics in northern Sinaloa.

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