Osmanthus fragrans is an evergreen garden tree species, with high ecological, social, and economic benefits (Lan et al. 2023), which is widely planted in Guizhou Province. From late April to June 2023, a leaf blight disease was observed on O. fragrans in a bauxite mining area in Qingzhen City, with an incidence of ~50%. Symptoms first appeared at the leaf tip or margin, as irregular brown spots, which gradually coalesced into dark brown patches until the leaves withered and fell off. Symptomatic leaves were collected and surface disinfected with 2% NaClO for 30 s, 75% ethanol for 30 s, rinsed 3 times in sterile ddH2O, air-dried and placed on potato dextrose agar (PDA) medium and incubated at 25°C for 7 d. Fungal colonies on PDA of 9 similar obtained isolates were white, with at least one concentric ring. The reverse was light yellow and gradually turned brown. At 12 d, the pycnidia on PDA was gray to black, spherical or conical, with a diameter of 305.15 μm (n=20). The conidial horns oozed out from pycnidia after 25 d of incubation on Pinus massoniana needles. The alpha conidia were unicellular, fusiform, hyaline, had a guttule at each end, and measured 6.24 ± 0.10 μm × 2.48 ± 0.04 μm (n=50). No beta or gamma conidia were observed. The morphological characteristics were likely to Diaporthe spp. (Gomes et al. 2013). DNA of isolates GH02, GH06 and GH08 was extracted. The internal transcribed spacer region (ITS) and partial sequences of translation elongation factor 1-alpha (TEF1-α), calmodulin (CAL), beta-tubulin (TUB2), and histone H3 (HIS) genes were amplified with primers ITS1/ITS4 (White et al. 1990), EF1-728F/EF1-986R, CAL228F/CAL737R (Carbone and Kohn, 1999), βt2a/βt2b and CYLH3F/H3-1b (Crous et al. 2004; Glass and Donaldson, 1995), respectively. The sequences of ITS, TEF-1α, TUB2, CAL and HIS were deposited in GenBank (GH02: PP813499, PP813844, PP813846, PP813848 and PP813850; GH06: PP813500, PP813845, PP813847, PP813849 and PP813851; GH08: PP507168 and PP529956 to PP529959). BLAST results showed the sequences of GH08 were highly identical to sequences of Phomopsis mahothocarpi (NR147522 [ITS], 527/530), P. mahothocarpi (MW700277 [TEF-1α], 367/372), D. eres (OR885862 [TUB], 513/513), D. celeris (ON221721 [CAL], 484/486), and D. eres (OP968956 [HIS], 477/477). A phylogenetic tree constructed with MEGA X using Neighbor-Joining algorithm (Felsenstein, 1985) indicated the isolate GH02, GH06 and GH08 separated from D. eres CBS 297.77 previously reported from O. aquifolium in Netherlands, as well as D. osmanthi and D. fusicola from O. fragrans in China (Gomes et al. 2013; Long et al. 2019; Si et al. 2021). Based on these results, the three isolates were identified as D. eres (Chaisiri et al., 2021). The isolate GH08 was deposited in the Forest Protection Laboratory, Guizhou University. To confirm pathogenicity, spore suspensions (1×105 spores/mL) of GH08 were sprayed on healthy detached leaves (n=10) and leaves of 3-year-old potted O. fragrans seedlings (n=8). An equal volume of sterile water was sprayed for the control. Then they were placed at 20°C and 70-80% RH. Similar leaf blight symptoms appeared after 5 and 15d on the inoculated leaves and seedlings, respectively. The re-isolated fungus, was identical to D. eres based on morphological and molecular analysis, thus fulfilling Koch's postulates. To our knowledge, this is the first report of D. eres causing leaf blight of O. fragrans in China, supporting a basis for developing effective methods to manage this disease.
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