Agronomy (Jul 2020)

Identification and Characterization of <i>Diaporthe</i> spp. Associated with Twig Cankers and Shoot Blight of Almonds in Spain

  • Maela León,
  • Mónica Berbegal,
  • José M. Rodríguez-Reina,
  • Georgina Elena,
  • Paloma Abad-Campos,
  • Antonio Ramón-Albalat,
  • Diego Olmo,
  • Antonio Vicent,
  • Jordi Luque,
  • Xavier Miarnau,
  • Carlos Agustí-Brisach,
  • Antonio Trapero,
  • Nieves Capote,
  • Francisco T. Arroyo,
  • Manuel Avilés,
  • David Gramaje,
  • Marcos Andrés-Sodupe,
  • Josep Armengol

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/agronomy10081062
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 8
p. 1062

Abstract

Read online

Two hundred and twenty-five Diaporthe isolates were collected from 2005 to 2019 in almond orchards showing twig cankers and shoot blight symptoms in five different regions across Spain. Multilocus DNA sequence analysis with five loci (ITS, tub, tef-1α, cal and his), allowed the identification of four known Diaporthe species, namely: D. amygdali, D. eres, D. foeniculina and D. phaseolorum. Moreover, a novel phylogenetic species, D. mediterranea, was described. Diaporthe amygdali was the most prevalent species, due to the largest number of isolates (85.3%) obtained from all sampled regions. The second most frequent species was D. foeniculina (10.2%), followed by D. mediterranea (3.6%), D. eres and D. phaseolorum, each with only one isolate. Pathogenicity tests were performed using one-year-old almond twigs cv. Vayro and representative isolates of the different species. Except for D. foeniculina and D. phaseolorum, all Diaporthe species were able to cause lesions significantly different from those developed on the uninoculated controls. Diaporthe mediterranea caused the most severe symptoms. These results confirm D. amygdali as a key pathogen of almonds in Spain. Moreover, the new species, D. mediterranea, should also be considered as a potential important causal agent of twig cankers and shoot blight on this crop.

Keywords