• Title/Summary/Keyword: Cladobotryum varium

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Occurrence of Disease Caused by Cladobotryum varium on Flammulina velutipes in Korea (Cladobotryum varium에 의한 팽이버섯 흰곰팡이병(가칭) 발생)

  • Kim, Han-Kyoung;Seok, Soon-Ja;Kim, Gwang-Po;Moon, Byung-Ju;Terashita, Takao
    • The Korean Journal of Mycology
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    • v.27 no.6 s.93
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    • pp.415-419
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    • 1999
  • Cladobotryum varium infects the fruitbody of Flammulina velutipes during its cultivation. In the early stage of infection, white mycelia of C. varium partially attacked young fruitbody and eventually killed whole fruitbody during fruitbodies development. White fungi pathogen isolated from F. velutipes cultivation farm were investigated in pathogenicity and morphological feautres. The pathogen was identified as Cladobotryum varium. In asexual stage, $2{\sim}4$ conidiophores formed, $8.5{\sim}10.0{\times}16.1{\sim}17.0\;{\mu}m$ long and conidiospores with single septum were shaped in chains, $32.8{\sim}50.4\;{\mu}m$ in size. Size of chlamydospores were $12.7{\sim}18.0{\times}17.7{\times}48.1\;{\mu}m$ with $1{\sim}4$ septa.

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Characterization of Species of Cladobotryum which Cause Cobweb Disease in Edible Mushrooms Grown in Korea

  • Back, Chang-Gi;Lee, Chang-Yun;Seo, Geon-Sik;Jung, Hee-Young
    • Mycobiology
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    • v.40 no.3
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    • pp.189-194
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    • 2012
  • Four Cladobotryum isolates were collected from four different commercially grown mushroom types infected with cobweb disease in Cheongdo-gun and Chilgok-gun of Gyeongbuk Province, Korea in 2010. The isolates were identified as C. mycophilum from Agaricus bisporus and Pleurotus eryngii, C. varium from Flammulina velutipes and Hypsizygus marmoreus. The cultural characteristics of the four isolates were investigated using potato dextrose agar (PDA) media under nine different temperatures ranging from $5{\sim}32^{\circ}C$. Rapid growth of the isolates to colony diameters of 47~82 mm was observed at conditions of $18{\sim}22^{\circ}C$. No growth was observed at $32^{\circ}C$. C. mycophilum produced a yellowish red pigment while C. varium produced a cream colored pigment after cultivation for 25 days on PDA. Phylogenetic analysis of the internal transcribed spacer region and partial 28S rDNA from the four isolates confirmed they were C. mycophilum and C. varium. Cross pathogenicity tests revealed that the two isolates of C. mycophilum were highly pathogenic toward three mushroom types, but not toward H. marmoreus. The two isolates of C. varium were less pathogenic than those of C. mycophilum, but were pathogenic toward all mushroom types evaluated.