Abstract

Red rot, caused by Colletotrichum falcatum, is the most significant problem of sugarcane worldwide. Pathological studies and three different marker systems were used to characterize 25 C. falcatum isolates collected from 18 subtropical sugarcane cultivars from 15 different sugarcane-growing regions of three north-eastern states of India to assess pathogen diversity. Of these 25 isolates, three were new (RR2A, RR15, RR83) from cultivars Co 7717, Co J83 and Co S88230, respectively, pathologically characterized on 13 standard differential hosts. Isolates Cf 01, Cf 08 and RR15 were the most, and Cf-07 the least virulent. Molecular characterization using random amplified polymorphic DNA, universal rice primers (URP) and inter simple sequence repeat markers amplified a total of 161 alleles of which 159 were polymorphic (98.76%). Unweighted paired group method with arithmetic averages analysis of combined data of all the DNA markers obtained by three marker systems classified 25 isolates into six clusters at 34% genetic similarity with high Mantel matrix correlation (r = 0.83). The principal component analysis (PCA) of marker data explained 68% of the variation by first three components. Molecular diversity as revealed in these isolates is very high, but non-structured. Isolate Co Pant 84212 was found to be genetically most diverse. We demonstrated for the first time that URPs derived from weed rice could successfully assess genetic diversity in C. falcatum. Molecular characterization of the C. falcatum isolates prevalent in north-eastern India would enable red rot management strategies, selection for resistance genes and development of resistant cultivars.

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