• Title/Summary/Keyword: V. albo-atrum

Search Result 2, Processing Time 0.014 seconds

Identification of Verticillium dahliae and V. albo-atrum Causing Wilt of Tomato in Korea

  • Kim, Jong-Tae;Park, In-Hee;Lee, Hyang-Burm;Hahm, Young-Il;Yu, Seung-Hum
    • The Plant Pathology Journal
    • /
    • v.17 no.4
    • /
    • pp.222-226
    • /
    • 2001
  • In 1997, 103 isolates of Verticillium were obtained from roots and stems of tomato plants showing wilt symptoms in greenhouses in eight areas of Korea. Out of these isolates, 75 were edintified as V. dahliae while 28 were identified as V. albo-atrum based on their morpho-logical and cultural characteristics. Both Verticillium species produced colonies with conidiophores, which were more or less erect, hyaline, with verticillate branches, and with 3-4 phialides at each node. V. dahliae produced microsclerotia, while V. albo-atrum produced resting dark mycelium. Optimum temperatures for mycelial growth of V. dahliae and V. albo-atrum on PDA were 22 and $26^{\circ}$, respectively. Mycelial growth of V. albo-atrum was slower than that of V. dahliae. Pathoge-nicity tests revealed that tomato cvs. Zuikoh No. 102, Kyoryokubeiju No. 2, Zuiken, Kagimuza, and Momotaro were susceptible to V. albo-atrum, while cvs. Zuikoh No. 102 and Kyoryokubeiju No.2 were susceptible to V. dahliae.

  • PDF

Fungi Detected in the Seeds of Vegetable Crops Imported from Japan (일본산(日本産) 수입(輸入) 채소(菜蔬) 종자(種子)에서 검출(檢出)된 진균(眞菌))

  • Park, Chang-Il;Kim, Wan-Gyu
    • The Korean Journal of Mycology
    • /
    • v.14 no.1
    • /
    • pp.89-91
    • /
    • 1986
  • Sixteen seed samples of nine vegetable crops imported from Japan were tested for plant quarantine by routine methods of seed health testing. Nineteen species of fungi including Alternara alternata were identified from the seed samples. Some species were very frequently detected in the seeds. In this experiment, Verticillium albo-atrum, V. dahliae and Macrophomina sp. from the seeds of spinach, and Cercospora capsici, Drechslera hawaiiensis and V. albo-atrum from the seeds of sweet pepper were detected for the first time, respectively. It has been reported that they had a pathogenicity on some vegetable crops in Japan and other countries. The data suggest that an epidemic damage may be occurred if the infected seeds are sown and cultivated in Korea.

  • PDF