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Plant Disease | 2012

First Report of Fusarium mangiferae Causing Mango Malformation in China

Rulin Zhan; Shun-Jin Yang; Fengquan Liu; Yanlong Zhao; Jinmei Chang; Yanbiao He

Mango (Mangifera indica L.) malformation caused by Fusarium mangiferae has been reported in many mango-growing regions of the world (3). The disease was also observed in Yunnan and Sichuan provinces of China (1). Typical symptoms in seedlings included loss of apical dominance, hyperplasia and hypertrophy of vegetative buds, shortened internodes, and leaves that were more brittle than those of healthy plants. Inflorescences were abnormally branched and thickened, with panicles producing as much as two to five times the normal number of flowers. Flowers in the malformed inflorescence were much more enlarged and crowded than the generally hypertrophied axes of the panicle, thus producing no fruit or aborting early. To identify the pathogen, samples of malformed and healthy mango seedlings were collected from the affected plantings. For isolation, portions of stems were cut into 3- to 4-mm segments, surface disinfested, dried, and then plated on potato dextrose agar and incubated at 25°C. Within 5 days, white, fluffy, aerial mycelium developed. With the aid of an inverted microscope, single conidia were transferred to carnation leaf agar (CLA) medium. After 10 days of incubation, morphological characteristics were found to be identical to those of F. mangiferae (4). Aerial mycelium was white with no pigmentation observed on potato sucrose agar. Pigmentation on rice medium was pink. On CLA medium, conidia grew in branched conidiophores with false heads bearing monophialides or polyphialides. No conidiospores in chains were observed. Microconidia were ovate to long and oval, 0 to 1 septate, and 3.1 to 10.2 × 1.5 to 2.2 μm. Macroconidia are falculate, 3 to 5 septate, and 18 to 38 × 1.8 to 2.4 μm. Chlamydospores were not observed. Pathogenicity studies were conducted with 7-month-old asymptomatic mango seedlings. These seedlings, except for the controls, were inoculated by injection of the isolated fungus in the axillary or apical bud position. A 1-ml spore suspension (1 × 106 spores/ml) was injected slowly into the stems using a microsyringe with three buds per seedling, for a total of 10 seedlings. Typical malformation symptoms developed within 3 to 4 months, and none of the plants inoculated with sterile water resulted in malformation symptoms. Reisolations from the induced malformed shoots yielded the same fungus, and no fungal growth was observed to be growing from the control plants. To confirm identity of the causal fungus, the gene encoding translation elongation factor 1 alpha (EF-1α) was amplified and sequenced (2). The EF-1α sequence was 660 bp long. The sequence (GenBank Accession No. HM068871) was 99.68% similar to sequences of FD_01167 in the Fusarium ID database. On the basis of symptoms, fungal morphology, the EF-1α region sequence, and pathogenicity testing, this fungus was identified as F. mangiferae. To our knowledge, this is the first report of F. mangiferae causing mango malformation in China. This report will establish a foundation for further study of F. mangiferae and effectively addressing the disease. References: (1) X. H. Chen. Pract. Technol. (in Chinese) 6:5, 1992. (2) D. M. Geiser et al. Eur. J. Plant Pathol. 110:473, 2004. (3) J. Kumar et al. Annu. Rev. Phytopathol. 31:217, 1993. (4) J. F. Leslie and B. A. Summerell. The Fusarium Laboratory Manual. Blackwell Publishing, Ames, IA, 2006.


Caryologia | 2014

The occurrence of two species of pineapple mealybugs (Dysmicoccus spp.) (Hemiptera: Pseudococcidae) in China and their genetic relationship based on rDNA ITS sequences

Yanbiao He; Ying-hong Liu; Rulin Zhan; Zai-fu Xu; Guang-ming Sun; Yanlong Zhao; Guoping Li; Jinmei Chang

To explore the composition, distribution and interrelation of the pineapple mealybugs in China, samples were collec from 14 counties of five provinces. The genetic variations of pineapple mealybugs from China, Brazil and Hawaii of USA have been analyzed. The whole ribosomal internal transcribed spacer 1 (ITS1), 5.8S and ribosomal internal transcribed spacer 2 (ITS2) were sequenced for all samples. Pink pineapple mealybug (PPM), Dysmicoccus brevipes (Cockerell) and gray pineapple mealybug (GPM), Dysmicoccus neobrevipes Beardsley are found causing damage on Ananas comosus (L.) Merr. PPM is a predominant species of mealybug on A. comosus in China. Though GPM has wider host range in China, PPM has larger distribution area than GPM. The results showed that two pineapple mealybug species belong to two different clades based on the sequences of ITS. PPM from China was found to have four haplotypes, and GPM had two haplotypes. The genetic variation of PPM is greater than that of GPM, though both of them had one predominant haplotype. One haplotype of PPM was found in samples from mainland China, and three from Hainan Island. Another haplotype of PPM was observed among the samples from Brazil and Hawaii. However, mealybugs from Wanning City of Hainan Island in China represented a different lineage that clearly diverged from other populations, which would be of a cryptic lineage or species in the pink pineapple mealybug complex. Mealybugs from Wanning City are probably native and were present long before the exotic pink pineapple mealybug was introduced in the early twentieth century. Most GPM, represented by a predominant haplotype, was widely found on sisal in plantations in south China. Other GPM, often found on sisal in urban green belt in south China, was of different haplotype from samples on sisal in plantations, probably originating from Taiwan.


Journal of Phytopathology | 2010

Mango Malformation Disease in South China Caused by Fusarium proliferatum

Rulin Zhan; Shun-Jin Yang; Honhing Ho; Feng Liu; Yanlong Zhao; Jinmei Chang; Yanbiao He


Archive | 2010

Natural anti-staling agent suitable for storage and fresh keeping of mangos and preparation method thereof

Jinmei Chang; Deqiang Gong; Yanbiao He; Songbiao Wang; Hongxia Wu; Quansheng Yao; Rulin Zhan; Yanlong Zhao


Archive | 2012

high-efficiency seed soaking agent for sugarcanes and preparation method thereof

Rulin Zhan; Junbo Su; Guoping Li; Yanlong Zhao; Yanbiao He; Jinmei Chang


Archive | 2010

Botanical plant-protecting agent and preparation method thereof

Jinmei Chang; Xinglong Chen; Yanbiao He; Feng Liu; Shun-Jin Yang; Rulin Zhan; Yanlong Zhao


Archive | 2011

Solar energy insect killing lamp

Rulin Zhan; Junbo Su; Guoping Li; Feng Liu; Yanlong Zhao; Yanbiao He; Jinmei Chang


Biotechnology Letters | 2016

Development of a sensitive molecular detection assay for mango malformation disease caused by Fusarium mangiferae.

Jingbo Wu; Feng Liu; Rulin Zhan; Guoping Li; Yanlong Zhao; Chang Jinmei; Yanbiao He


Plant Disease | 2012

First Report of Fusarium mangiferae in China Causing Mango Malformation

Rulin Zhan; Shun-Jin Yang; Feng Liu; Yanlong Zhao; Jinmei Chang; Yanbiao He


Archive | 2012

Insect (Fruit flies) enticing tribocytic device

Rulin Zhan; Guoping Li; Feng Liu; Yanlong Zhao; Yanbiao He; Jinmei Chang

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Yanbiao He

Chinese Academy of Tropical Agricultural Sciences

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Jinmei Chang

Chinese Academy of Tropical Agricultural Sciences

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Rulin Zhan

Chinese Academy of Tropical Agricultural Sciences

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Feng Liu

Chinese Academy of Tropical Agricultural Sciences

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Guoping Li

Chinese Academy of Tropical Agricultural Sciences

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Shun-Jin Yang

Chinese Academy of Tropical Agricultural Sciences

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Quansheng Yao

Chinese Academy of Tropical Agricultural Sciences

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Songbiao Wang

Chinese Academy of Tropical Agricultural Sciences

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Chang Jinmei

Chinese Academy of Tropical Agricultural Sciences

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Fengquan Liu

Nanjing Agricultural University

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