Plant Disease, Published Online: 20 Oct 2020, 2020
Abstract
Calibrachoa (Solanaceae) is a plant genus typical of open environments that occurs in both the Pampas and the high-altitude grasslands of southern Brazil (Fregonezi et al. 2012). Calibrachoas (mini petunias) are hybrids developed from native germplasm, with increasing importance in the ornamental plant market. During October 2019, basal rot was observed in plants of Calibrachoa hybrida cv. INTA 06575 grown in a propagation greenhouse in Hurlingham, Buenos Aires. Symptoms included darkening and withering of leaves (incidence 10%). White mycelial mats containing sclerotia of 2 to 8 mm in diameter were evident on the base of the wilted plants and the nearby soil surface. Pieces of symptomatic stem tissues were surface disinfested in ethanol 70% for 1 min, sodium hypochlorite (20 g of Cl/liter) for 1 min, washed with distilled water for 1 min, and placed on potato dextrose agar (PDA) plates. The plates were incubated in the dark for 5 days at 23°C, and individual colonies were transferred to new plates of PDA to obtain pure cultures. The colonies developed white cottony mycelium and a ring of large black sclerotia at the periphery of the plates. No teleomorph was observed. Based on the morphology of the colony, sclerotia, and microscopic observations, the pathogen was identified as Sclerotinia sclerotiorum (Lib.) de Bary (Mordue and Holliday 1976). A representative isolate was deposited in the Entomopathogenic Fungal Culture Collection of Argentina, CEPAVE, as CEP 785. Genomic DNA was extracted according to the method of Stenglein and Balatti (2006), and the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region of rDNA was amplified with the primers ITS1/ITS4 (White et al. 1990). The resulting sequence was deposited in GenBank (accession no. MT177216), and the BLASTn search showed 100% of identity with those of S. sclerotiorum (e.g., MG931017, KX781301). The pathogenicity of the isolate was confirmed by placing 10-mm2 agar plugs obtained from a 7-day-old culture grown on PDA on the stem bases of 12 healthy 2-month-old potted calibrachoas. Those segments were wrapped with moistened sterilized cotton (Choi et al. 2017). Four plants with sterile PDA plugs served as controls. Each plant was placed inside a polyethylene bag, and all of them were kept in a growth chamber at 20°C. All the inoculated plants had their leaves discolored after 5 days and wilted after 13 days. S. sclerotiorum was consistently reisolated from rotten stem bases, thus fulfilling Koch’s postulates. Control plants did not develop symptoms. To our knowledge, this is the first report of S. sclerotiorum causing basal rot on C. hybrida (Farr and Rossman 2020) in Argentina and in the world.