Microorganisms (Jun 2023)

Potential Biocontrol Agents of Corn Tar Spot Disease Isolated from Overwintered <i>Phyllachora maydis</i> Stromata

  • Eric T. Johnson,
  • Patrick F. Dowd,
  • José Luis Ramirez,
  • Robert W. Behle

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms11061550
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 6
p. 1550

Abstract

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Tar spot disease in corn, caused by Phyllachora maydis, can reduce grain yield by limiting the total photosynthetic area in leaves. Stromata of P. maydis are long-term survival structures that can germinate and release spores in a gelatinous matrix in the spring, which are thought to serve as inoculum in newly planted fields. In this study, overwintered stromata in corn leaves were collected in Central Illinois, surface sterilized, and caged on water agar medium. Fungi and bacteria were collected from the surface of stromata that did not germinate and showed microbial growth. Twenty-two Alternaria isolates and three Cladosporium isolates were collected. Eighteen bacteria, most frequently Pseudomonas and Pantoea species, were also isolated. Spores of Alternaria, Cladosporium, and Gliocladium catenulatum (formulated as a commercial biofungicide) reduced the number of stromata that germinated compared to control untreated stromata. These data suggest that fungi collected from overwintered tar spot stromata can serve as biological control organisms against tar spot disease.

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