1. A report of collar rot disease of Sugandh mantri (Homalomena aromatica) caused by Sclerotium delphinii in West Tripura state of India.
- Author
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Kamil, Deeba, Bahadur, Amar, Debnath, Prasenjit, Choudhary, Shiv Pratap, Kumari, Anjali, and Das, Amrita
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DISEASE incidence ,DISEASE progression ,RECOMBINANT DNA ,SCLEROTIUM (Mycelium) ,LEAF spots - Abstract
During the year 2018–19, collar rot symptoms on Sugandh mantri plants were observed in fields in Agartala district of West Tripura state of India with a disease incidence of 20%. In the early stages of disease development, typical collar rot symptoms exhibited were dark brown necrotic lesions on the stem base. Later, the affected plants completely rotted and died. The diseased samples plated on PDA medium showed abundant, fluffy, dense white mycelia with reddish brown spherical sclerotia matching with the morphology of Sclerotium delphinii. The internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region of rDNA of the fungus was amplified and sequenced. The sequences revealed 99–100% identity with Sclerotium delphinii. The Koch's postulates were performed on three-month-old Sugandh mantri plants to confirm the pathogenicity of the isolated fungus. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report of Sclerotium delphinii causing collar rot disease on Sugandh mantri plants in India. • The disease incidence was recorded 20% from West Tripura state of Agartala district (23°54′48.9″N 91°19′13.4″E) of India. • Sclerotium delphinii was identified as causal agent. • The pathogen was identified based on morphological and molecular characterization. • Pathogenicity test was also employed to confirm the causal agent. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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