บทคัดย่องานวิจัย

A Postharvest Fruit Rot in d’Anjou Pears Caused by Sphaeropsis pyriputrescens sp. nov.

C. L. Xiao and J. D. Rogers

Plant Dis. 88:114-118

2004

บทคัดย่อ

A Postharvest Fruit Rot in d’Anjou Pears Caused by Sphaeropsis pyriputrescens sp. nov. During a survey of postharvest diseases in stored pears conducted in the 2001-02 storage season, a new postharvest fruit rot in d’Anjou pears was discovered in WashingtonState. Symptoms of this disease were stem-end rot, calyx-end rot, and wound-associated rot, which presumably originated from infections of stem, calyx, and wounds o­n the fruit surfaces, respectively. The decayed area o­n the fruit was firm or spongy and appeared brown. During the late storage period from March to May 2002, this disease was observed in 19 of 39 lots and accounted for 2 to 21% of all decayed fruit. The causal agent, Sphaeropsis sp., was consistently recovered from decayed fruit with the symptoms described above. Two isolates of the fungus were used for pathogenicity tests o­n pear fruit. Decay symptoms developed o­n fruit inoculated with spore suspensions of the fungus o­n the stem, calyx, and wounds o­n the fruit surface. The fungus was reisolated from these decayed fruit. The fungus, Sphaeropsis pyriputrescens sp. nov., was characterized and described. o­n potato dextrose agar (PDA), oatmeal agar, and pear juice agar at 20°C, the fungus grew at mean rates of 21, 15, and 24 mm day-1 in colony diameter, respectively. o­n PDA, the fungus formed a circular colony with dense, hyaline hyphae and a few or some aerial mycelia. Colonies appeared light yellow to yellow o­n 2-week-old PDA cultures. The fungus grew at temperatures from 0 to 25°C, with optimum growth between 15 and 20°C, little or no growth at 30°C, and no growth at 35°C. This is a low-temperature species.