Abstract

An oomycetous fungus Phytophthora causing fruit rot is the most devastating disease of arecanut in different agro-climatic zones of Karnataka with varied climatic profiles. The main aim of this investigation was to characterize the geo-distant Phytophthora populations infecting arecanut using robust morphological, multi-gene phylogeny and haplotype analysis. A total of 48 geo-distant fruit rot infected samples were collected during the South-West monsoon of 2017–19. Pure culture of the suspected pathogen was isolated from the infected nuts and pathogenic ability was confirmed and characterized. Colony morphology revealed typical whitish mycelium with stellate or petalloid pattern and appearance with torulose hyphae. Sporangia were caducous, semipapillate or papillate, globose, ellipsoid or ovoid-obpyriform in shape and sporangiophores were irregularly branched or simple sympodial in nature. Subsequent multi-gene phylogeny (ITS, β-tub, TEF-1α and Cox-II) and sequence analysis confirmed the identity of oomycete as Phytophthora meadii which is predominant across the regions studied. We identified 49 haplotypes representing the higher haplotype diversity with varying relative haplotype frequency. Comprehensive study confirmed the existence of substantial variability among geo-distant populations (n = 48) of P. meadii. The knowledge on population dynamics of the pathogen causing fruit rot of arecanut generated from this investigation would aid in developing appropriate disease management strategies to curtail its further occurrence and spread in arecanut ecosystem.

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