1. Identification of Eutypa spp. Causing Eutypa Dieback of Grapevine in Eastern North America.
- Author
-
Rolshausen, Philippe E., Baumgartner, Kendra, Travadon, Renaud, Fujiyoshi, Phillip, Pouzoulet, Jerome, and Wilcox, Wayne F.
- Subjects
- *
DIEBACK , *GRAPE diseases & pests , *PLANT diseases , *PHYTOPATHOGENIC fungi , *FUNGAL diseases of plants , *PLANT morphology - Abstract
Eutypa dieback of grapevine is caused by Eutypa lata in production areas with Mediterranean climates in California, Australasia, Europe, and South Africa. Eutypa dieback has also been described in the colder, eastern North American vineyards where cultivars adapted from native Vitis spp. (e.g., Vitis x labruscana 'Concord') are primarily grown. However, the causal agents associated with the diseases in this region have not been conclusively identified. Examination of 48 vine-yards showing symptoms of dieback in the northeastern United States (Connecticut, Massachusetts, Michigan, New York, Ohio, and Rhode Island) and Ontario, Canada revealed that vineyards were mainly in-fected by Eutypa spp. other than E. lata. Multigene phylogenies (inter- nal transcribed spacer ribosomal DNA, ß-tubulin, and RNA polymer-ase II) of isolates recovered from these vineyards indicated that Eutypa dieback is caused primarily by an undescribed Eutypa sp. and E. lae-vata. Eutypa sp. was recovered from 56% of the vineyards examined, whereas E. laevata and E. lata were less far common (17 and 6%, respectively). Fruiting body morphology and spore dimensions supported phylogenetic separation of the three taxa. Pathogenicity tests conducted on Vitis vinifera 'Chardonnay' in the greenhouse and in the field verified that all three species were able to cause wood canker and to infect pruning wounds, respectively. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF