Late wilt of corn - Magnaporthiopsis maydis
EEffective: August 18, 2010 - December 12, 2010
Taxonomic Position:
Magnaporthales : Magnaporthaceae
Pest Type:
Fungi
Pest Code (NAPIS):
FGDNCGZ
No manual – See Host Matrix |
These Approved Methods are appropriate for:
Major Hosts identified in the Host Matrix:
Corn
This list includes important economic or environmental hosts but does not represent all major hosts of the pest. Check CAPS pest datasheet for complete list of hosts.
Pest is vectored by:
No known vector.
Survey
Approved Method(s):
Method |
Instructions |
NAPIS Survey Method |
Visual |
Collect symptomatic plant material. |
3031 - General Visual Observation
|
Signs:
No specific signs are present.
Symptoms:
The first symptom is a moderately rapid wilting of plants usually at about the time of flowering until shortly before maturity. Wilting progresses from lower to upper portions of the plant. Leaves first become dull green, eventually lose color, and become dry as though suffering from lack of water. Vascular bundles in the stalk become reddish-brown, lower internodes also assume this color. In advanced stages of the disease, lower portions of the stalk become dry, shrunken, and hollow. Secondary infection by other pathogens frequently progresses into stalk rot.
Key Diagnostics
ID/Diagnostic: Morphological
Morphological: Pathogen may be identified morphologically by examination of the shape and size of conidia and conidiophores, color and type of colony, and temperature requirements (Samra et al., 1963).
Mistaken Identities:
Symptoms can be confused with drought stress.
When culturing, the fungus may be confused with other more rapidly growing Harpophora and Gaeumannomyces species.
In Progress / Literature-based Diagnostics:
Molecular: Culture the fungus in complete medium (CM) broth and incubate on an orbital shaker for 3 days at room temperature. Harvest mycelia for DNA extraction.
PCR primers have been developed for differentiating H. maydis (=Cephalosporium maydis) from some of its relatives (Acremonium, Cephalosporium, Gaeumannomcyes, and Phialophora) (Saleh and Leslie, 2004).
Ward and Bateman (1999) use a pair of PCR primers that amplify a segment of the ribosomal gene locus from many members of the Gaeumannomyces and Phialophora fungal pathogens from maize and other host plants. The PCR product from Harpophora maydis (=Cephalosporium maydis) can be distinguished from that of other members of the group on the basis of its unique size (490 bp) relative to that of other species.