Abstract

Tar spot, caused byPhyllachora maydis, is an emerging disease of corn in the United States. Stromata ofP. maydisare sometimes surrounded by necrotic lesions known as fisheyes and were previously reported to be caused by the fungus Microdochiummaydis. The association ofM. maydiswith fisheye lesions has not been well documented outside of initial descriptions from the early 1980s. The objective of this work was to assess and identify Microdochium-like fungi associated with necrotic lesions surrounding P. maydis stromata using a culture-based method. In 2018, corn leaf samples with fisheye lesions associated with tar spot stromata were collected from 31 production fields across Mexico, Illinois, and Wisconsin. Cultures of pure isolates collected from Mexico believed to be M. maydis were included in the study. A total of 101 Microdochium/Fusarium-like isolates were obtained from the necrotic lesions, and 91% were identified asFusariumspp., based on initial ITS sequence data.Multi-gene (ITS, TEF1-α, RPB1, and RPB2)phylogenies were constructed for a subset of 55 isolates;Microdochium,Cryptostroma, andFusariumreference sequences were obtained from GenBank. All the necrotic lesion isolates clustered withinFusariumlineages and were phylogenetically distinct from the Microdochiumclade. All Fusarium isolates from Mexico belonged to theF. incarnatum-equisetispecies complex, whereas >85% of the U.S. isolates grouped within theF. sambucinumspecies complex. Our study suggests that initial reports of M. maydis were misidentifications of resident Fusarium spp. [Formula: see text] Copyright © 2023 The Author(s). This is an open access article distributed under the CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 International license.

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