Tar spot is a fungal disease complex of corn that has been destructive and yield limiting in Central and South America for nearly 50 years. , the causal agent of tar spot, is an emerging corn pathogen in the United States, first reported in 2015 from major corn producing regions of the country. The tar spot disease complex putatively includes (syn. ), which increases disease damage through the development of necrotic halos surrounding tar spot lesions. These necrotic halos, termed "fish-eye" symptoms, have been identified in the United States, though has not yet been confirmed. A recent surge in disease severity and loss of yield attributed to tar spot in the United States has led to increased attention and expanded efforts to understand the disease complex and how to manage it. In this study, next-generation sequencing of the internal transcribed spacer-1 (ITS1) ribosomal DNA was used to identify fungal taxa that distinguish tar spot infections with or without fish-eye symptoms. Fungal communities within tar spot only lesions were significantly different from communities having fish-eye symptoms. Two low abundance OTUs were identified as sp., however, neither were associated with fish-eye symptom development. Interestingly, a single OTU was found to be significantly more abundant in fish-eye lesions compared to tar spot lesions and had a 91% ITS1 identity to . In addition, the occurrence of this OTU was positively associated with fish-eye symptom networks, but not in tar spot symptom networks. has been reported to cause necrotic lesions on various monocot grasses. Whether the related fungus we detected is part of the tar-spot complex of corn and responsible for fish-eye lesions remains to be tested. Alternatively, many OTUs identified as , suggesting that different isolate genotypes may be capable of causing both tar spot and fish-eye symptoms, independent of other fungi. We conclude that is not required for fish-eye symptoms in tar spot of corn.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6923758PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1094/PBIOMES-03-19-0017-RDOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

tar spot
48
fish-eye symptoms
16
tar
12
spot
12
complex corn
12
disease complex
12
united states
12
spot lesions
12
fungal communities
8
communities tar
8

Similar Publications

Visual detection of stromata (brown-black, elevated fungal fruiting bodies) is the primary method for quantifying tar spot early in the season because these structures are definitive signs of the disease and essential for effective disease monitoring and management. Here, we present the Stromata Contour Detection Algorithm version 2 (SCDA v2), which addresses the limitations of the previously developed SCDA version 1 (SCDA v1), without the need to empirically search for optimal decision-making input parameters (DMIPs) while achieving higher and consistent accuracy in tar spot stromata detection. SCDA v2 operates in two components: (i) SCDA v1 producing tar spot-like region proposals for a given input corn leaf Red-Green-Blue (RGB) image and (ii) a pretrained convolutional neural network (CNN) classifier identifying true tar spot stromata from the region proposals.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Tar spot of corn ( L.) is a significant disease in the United States and Canada caused by , an obligate biotroph fungus. However, field research critical for understanding and managing the disease has been hindered by a need for methods to inoculate corn with in field environments.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Genome-Informed Trophic Classification and Functional Characterization of Virulence Proteins from the Maize Tar Spot Pathogen .

Phytopathology

August 2024

Crop Production and Pest Control Research Unit, U.S. Department of Agriculture-Agricultural Research Service, West Lafayette, IN 47907.

Article Synopsis
  • The text discusses a foliar fungal pathogen responsible for tar spot disease in maize, emphasizing the limited understanding of its lifestyle and the role of effector proteins.
  • The study adopts a genome-informed approach to predict the pathogen’s lifestyle and functionally analyze selected effector proteins, revealing that it possesses carbohydrate-active enzymes typical of biotrophic fungi.
  • Key findings include the identification of specific effector proteins that may suppress plant immune responses and their structural similarities to known fungal effectors, shedding light on mechanisms involved in disease development.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Vetiver grass () has received extensive attention in recent years due to its diverse applications in soil and water conservation, heavy metal remediation, as well as essential oil and phenolic acids extraction. In 2019, the emergence of tar spot disease on was documented in Zhanjiang, Guangdong Province, China. Initially, the disease manifested as black ascomata embedded within leaf tissue, either scattered or clustered on leaf surfaces.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The Levantine basin (LB) in the Southeastern Mediterranean Sea is a high-risk oil pollution hot spot owing to its dense maritime traffic and intense oil and gas exploration and exploitation activities. In February 2021 the Israeli LB shorelines were impacted by an exceptional tar pollution event (~550 tons; average distribution: ~3 kg tar m front beach) of an unknown oil spill source. Here we report on the immediate numerical modelling assessment of the oil spill propagation and tar distribution; operational use of underwater gliders for tracking water column anomalies of dissolved polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) and turbidity signals; the beached tar composition and amounts and the short-term response of the microbial population along the ~180 km shoreline.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!