New Disease Reports (2020) 42, 14. [http://dx.doi.org/10.5197/j.2044-0588.2020.042.014]
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First report of Erysiphe corylacearum on Corylus avellana and C. colurna in Austria

H. Voglmayr 1,2*, T. Zankl 2, I. Krisai-Greilhuber 1 and T. Kirisits 2

*hermann.voglmayr@boku.ac.at

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Received: 28 Sep 2020; Published: 07 Nov 2020

Keywords: hazelnut, obligate parasite, powdery mildew

In September 2020, prominent powdery mildew disease symptoms were seen on leaves of Corylus avellana (hazelnut) and C. colurna (Turkish hazelnut) at several localities in eastern and southern Austria (Burgenland, Carinthia, Lower Austria, Styria, Vienna). The symptoms differed from those previously observed (caused by Phyllactinia guttata) by mycelia on the upper leaf surface and by smaller chasmothecia with branched appendices. The disease was observed on Corylus spp. growing in mixed deciduous forests, hedges as well as city gardens and parks.

Disease symptoms started as small spots of white, amphigenous surface mycelium, that radially enlarged to form effuse patches reaching up to 2 cm in diameter, eventually becoming confluent and then covering the entire leaf surface (Figs. 1-2). Infections on the lower leaf surface caused chlorotic spots on the upside (Fig. 1). Upon severe infection, leaves were distorted (Figs. 1-2). On surface mycelium, ellipsoid to doliiform conidia (27-36 × 18-23 µm) were produced singly on conidiophores (Fig. 3). In addition, dark brown chasmothecia, 70-120 µm in diameter were abundantly produced (Fig. 4), which had up to 15, 60-90 µm long, stiff, hyaline appendages with repeatedly dichotomously branched tips. They contained 2-6 broadly ellipsoid, mostly (3-)7-8 spored asci of 51-70 × 38-57 µm, with hyaline ascospores 19-28 × 13-18 µm (Fig. 5). Based on these characters, the powdery mildew was identified as Erysiphe corylacearum (Braun & Cook, 2012).

To confirm the morphological identification, the ITS-LSU of sample WU 43287 (Lower Austria, Gießhübl, host: Corylus avellana) was sequenced. DNA was extracted from chasmothecia using the innuPREP DNA Micro Kit (Analytik Jena, Germany) according to the manufacturer's instructions, with a lysis time of 16 hours. The ITS-partial LSU was amplified as a single stretch with primers V9G and LR5 and sequenced according to Voglmayr et al. (2019). The obtained sequence was deposited in GenBank (Accession No. MW031866), and representative voucher specimens were deposited in the fungarium of the University of Vienna (WU 43287, WU 43421, WU 43423, WU 43424, WU 43514, WU 43515, WU 43520, WU 43525). A nBLAST analysis revealed 99-100% identity to sequences of E. corylacearum, with 100% identity to sequences from Azerbaijan (LC270863), Iran (MF668615, MH047243), Japan (MT095104), Switzerland (MN822721-MN822723) and Turkey (KY082910), confirming the species identification.

Native to East Asia and probably North America, E. corylacearum was first observed in Turkey in 2013 and has since rapidly extended its distribution range to West Asia as well as Eastern and Central Europe (Beenken et al., 2020; Heluta & Fokshei, 2020). Erysiphe corylacearum has been reported as a severe invasive alien pathogen, causing significant yield losses in hazelnut orchards in Turkey, Iran and Georgia (Arzanlou et al., 2018; Meparishvili et al., 2019).

Figure1+
Figure 1: Powdery mildew symptoms (chlorotic spots, white surface mycelium and leaf distortion) on leaves of Corylus avellana caused by Erysiphe corylacearum.
Figure 1: Powdery mildew symptoms (chlorotic spots, white surface mycelium and leaf distortion) on leaves of Corylus avellana caused by Erysiphe corylacearum.
Figure2+
Figure 2: Confluent mycelial patches of powdery mildew on apical leaves of Corylus avellana caused by Erysiphe corylacearum.
Figure 2: Confluent mycelial patches of powdery mildew on apical leaves of Corylus avellana caused by Erysiphe corylacearum.
Figure3+
Figure 3: Anamorph of Erysiphe corylacearum: a) surface mycelium on host leaf with erect conidiophores bearing single conidia, b) ellipsoid to doliiform conidia.
Figure 3: Anamorph of Erysiphe corylacearum: a) surface mycelium on host leaf with erect conidiophores bearing single conidia, b) ellipsoid to doliiform conidia.
Figure4+
Figure 4: Surface mycelium on host leaf with numerous chasmothecia of Erysiphe corylacearum.
Figure 4: Surface mycelium on host leaf with numerous chasmothecia of Erysiphe corylacearum.
Figure5+
Figure 5: Chasmothecium of Erysiphe corylacearum with appendices, released ascus and ascospores.
Figure 5: Chasmothecium of Erysiphe corylacearum with appendices, released ascus and ascospores.

Acknowledgements

The authors thank Christian Scheuer for information on a record from Styria.


References

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  6. Voglmayr H, Jaklitsch WM, Mohammadi H, Kazemzadeh Chakusary M, 2019. The genus Juglanconis (Diaporthales) on Pterocarya. Mycological Progress 18, 425-437.   [http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11557-018-01464-0]

To cite this report: Voglmayr H, Zankl T, Krisai-Greilhuber I, Kirisits T, 2020. First report of Erysiphe corylacearum on Corylus avellana and C. colurna in Austria. New Disease Reports 42, 14. [http://dx.doi.org/10.5197/j.2044-0588.2020.042.014]

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