FUNGI ASSOCIATED WITH COTTON DECLINE IN ANGOLA

Citation
A. Ragazzi et al., FUNGI ASSOCIATED WITH COTTON DECLINE IN ANGOLA, Zeitschrift fur Pflanzenkrankheiten und Pflanzenschutz, 104(2), 1997, pp. 133-139
Citations number
15
Categorie Soggetti
Plant Sciences
ISSN journal
03408159
Volume
104
Issue
2
Year of publication
1997
Pages
133 - 139
Database
ISI
SICI code
0340-8159(1997)104:2<133:FAWCDI>2.0.ZU;2-M
Abstract
An investigation into the causes of cotton decline on plantations in A ngola was carried our. After other possible biotic and abiotic causes of the decline had been eliminated, the state of the leaves in particu lar was examined. Eighteen fungi were isolated, of which eight were fo und with frequencies ranging from 10 to 70%. Alternaria alternata, A. gossypina, Colletotrichum gossypii, Cerospora gossypina, Curvularia sp icifera, Phomopsis sp. I, Phyllosticta sp. and Ramularia gossypii. The pathogenicity of the isolated fungi was then tested on callus culture s in vitro and in vivo on 21-day-old plantlets. Four of the isolated f ungi were found to be pathogens, causing severe necrosis: A. alternata , A. gossypina, C. spicifera, and R. gossypii. These fungi were reinoc ulated in vivo on the plant leaves in suspensions of 250,000 conidia/m l and again produced varying degrees of leaf spotting and necrosis, co nfirming their pathogenicity in vivo. There were interesting associati ons between these four pathogenic fungi and with the other fungi, whic h had been isolates with a frequency of less than 10 %: Acremonium spp ., Botrytis cinerea, Gliocladium roseum, Gliocladium spp., Phomopsis s p. II, Phoma sp., Rhizoctonia solani, Trichoderma harzianum, T. viride , and ulocladium sp. Of the Four pathogenic fungi, two were already kn own in Angola: Alternaria gossypina and Ramularia gossypii. The isolat ed fungi are able to survive on vegetable debris and infected plants. The findings of the study and the above observations, as well as the t otal lack of preventive measures in Angola (especially the failure to dispose of plant debris and weeds) and the fact that the infections we re recurrent, all suggested that these fungi were a significant factor in cotton decline in the Angolan plantations examined.