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Plant Disease 1997-Jun

Occurrence of Vine Decline Diseases of Melons in Honduras.

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B Bruton
M Miller

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抽象

A survey of vine decline diseases of melons (Cucumis melo L.) was conducted on three geographically separate farms (12 fields) in the area of San Lorenzo, Honduras, during the spring of 1996. Symptoms were typical of the vine declines in that the leaves began yellowing and collapsing in the crown just prior to harvest and the decline radiated outward. Crown lesions, typical of many of the vine declines, were observed infrequently. Most plants exhibited no crown lesion. Roots exhibited brown lesions and root corking, and were generally lacking root hairs, although the roots were not macerated. Fruit were small sized, low in sugars, and sunburned. Isolations were made from the crown area, primary root, and secondary roots of affected plants by excising 3- to 5-mm pieces and surface sterilizing for 30 to 60 s with 0.5% sodium hypochlorite. Four tissue pieces from each plant part were placed on 2.0% water agar plus 0.1 g of streptomycin sulfate per liter and their identity maintained. Plates were examined for fungal growth daily for 5 days and hyphal tips from all colonies were transferred to potato dextrose agar and Synthetischer nährstoffärmer agar (2) to allow for sporulation. Rhizoctonia solani Kühn was the predominant fungus isolated from affected plants in several fields, with an incidence as high as 75%. A Pythium sp. was isolated from primary and secondary roots of 50% of the plants on the Santa Rosa farm. Vines exhibiting tan to light brown crown lesions either on one side of the vine or encompassing the crown, but without gumming, always produced colonies of Fusarium semitectum Berk. & Ravenel. Fusarium solani (Mart.) Appel & Wollenweb. emend. W. C. Snyder & H. N. Hans. was isolated from roots of more than 30% of the plants, although this is not unusually high. Crown lesions typical of charcoal rot were observed in some fields, with Macrophomina phaseolina (Tassi) Goidanich being isolated from 65% of the plants in one field. Charcoal rot was a minor problem in all fields but one. Didymella bryoniae (Auersw.) Rehm was not isolated from any of the plants. A Stagonospora-like fungus, which has been demonstrated recently as a potential contributor to vine decline (1), was isolated on 17% of the plants from five fields on the Embarcadero Farm. Monosporascus cannonballus Pollack & Uecker was isolated infrequently in one field on the Santa Rosa Farm. This is the first report of M. cannonballus and a Stagonospora-like fungus in Honduras. References: (1) M. E. Miller et al. Phytopathology 86:S3, 1996. (2) H. I. Nirenberg. Mitt. Biol. Bundesanst. Land Forstwirtsch. Berlin-Dahlem. 169:1, 1976.

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