SummaryVirulence of 31 Kenyan isolates of Fusarium oxysporum obtained from bananas showing symptoms of Panama disease was tested against the differential banana cvs Bluggoe, Gros Michel, Dwarf Cavendish, and two other local cvs Muraru and Wang'ae. Seventeen isolates were assigned to either race 1 or race 2 of F. oxysporum f.sp. cubense (FOC). Race 4 was not apparent in this sample of 31 isolates from Kenya as none were pathogenic to cv. Cavendish, and no wilted Cavendish have been observed in field surveys in Kenya. Races could not be assigned to 12 isolates as they were virulent on more than one differential cultivar, and two were apparently not pathogenic. All isolates assigned to races 1 and 2 belonged to the VCG bridging complex 0124/5/8/20, but some other isolates belonging to this VCG complex could not be assigned to race. All five isolates assigned to VCG 01212 could not be assigned to known races. Considerable variability thus exists within FOC isolates within this region. Local cultivars of banana showed differential resistance to the pathogen. The interaction of cultivars and isolates on the level of disease was significant. Overall, cv. Wang'ae was the most susceptible to most of the isolates tested, regardless of their race, and could therefore be used as a reference cultivar in pathogenicity tests of isolates of FOC in the East African region. Of the cultivars tested that are widely grown on smallholder farms in Kenya, Muraru was the least susceptible.
E .M . L O DW IG , P. D. B RI DG E , M .A . RU TH E RF OR D , J . K U NG 'U A ND P. J EF FR I ES . 1999. Molecular approaches for the assessment of intraspecific diversity within an economically important plant pathogen were compared with traditional physiological methods (vegetative compatibility testing). The vegetative compatibility groups (VCGs) of 14 isolates of Fusarium oxysporum f.sp. cubense (FOC) from Kenya were first assessed using nitrate non-utilizing mutants. Nine of these isolates, from different areas of the country, were compatible with one or more of VCGs 0124, 0125, 0128 and 01220, i.e. they formed a single clonal lineage. Three isolates, all originating from the banana growing district of Kisii, were compatible with the VCG 01212 and formed a second distinct clonal lineage. Mutants could not be recovered from one isolate (62) and two isolates (27 and 30) were not vegetatively compatible with any of the VCG testers and may represent two novel VCGs. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) fingerprinting, especially when using the M13 derived primer, was found to produce banding patterns that correlated with clonal lineage and also distinguished isolates 27 and 30 when analysed by unweighted pair group method analysis and principle co-ordinate analysis. This approach also distinguished FOC from F. oxysporum IMI350438 isolated from Triticum sp. and from isolates of Colletotrichum gloeosporioides. Total protein profiles were analysed by sodium dodecyl sulphate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) and although clonal lineages were not separated, isolates 27 and 30 were again distinguishable and FOC produced a different profile to F. oxysporum (IMI 350438) and C. gloeosporioides.
Banana, an increasingly important crop in Kenya, is now threatened by the presence there of black leaf streak disease, caused by Mycosphaerella fijiensis. Following an epidemic of leaf disease in 1989, a survey was carried out in the major bananagrowing areas of Kenya. Black leaf streak was recorded for the first time in Kenya but was absent from western Kenya.
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