Abstract:In June of 2009, a golf course putting green sample of creeping bentgrass (Agrostis stolonifera L.) cv. Penn G-2 from a golf club in North Carolina was submitted to the Michigan State University Turfgrass Disease Diagnostic Laboratory for diagnosis. The sample exhibited symptoms of general wilt, decline, and characteristic necrosis from the leaf tips down. Fungal pathogens were ruled out when no phytopathogenic fungal structures were observed with microscopic examination of infected tissue. Symptoms appeared s… Show more
“…poae ( Mitkowski et al, 2005 ) and the bacterial wilt of bentgrass is caused by Acidovorax avenae var. avenae ( Giordano et al, 2010 ), although outbreaks of bacterial wilt of bentgrass have been caused by X. translucens pv. graminis have been reported ( Roberts and Vargas, 1984 ).…”
Bacterial wilt is a vascular wilt disease caused by Xanthomonas translucens pv. poae that infects Poa annua, a grass that is commonly found on golf course greens throughout the world. Bacterial wilt causes symptoms of etiolation, wilting, and foliar necrosis. The damage is most prevalent during the summer and the pathogen can kill turf under conditions optimal for disease development. Fifteen isolates of X. translucens pv. poae were collected from northern regions in the United States and tested for virulence against P. annua. All 15 isolates were pathogenic on P. annua, but demonstrated variable levels of virulence when inoculated onto P. annua under greenhouse conditions. The isolates were divided into two virulence groups. The first group containing four isolates generally resulted in less than 40% mortality following inoculation. The second group, containing the other eleven isolates, produced between 90 and 100% mortality following inoculation. These results suggest that differences in the virulence of bacterial populations present on a golf course may result in more or less severe amounts of observed disease.
“…poae ( Mitkowski et al, 2005 ) and the bacterial wilt of bentgrass is caused by Acidovorax avenae var. avenae ( Giordano et al, 2010 ), although outbreaks of bacterial wilt of bentgrass have been caused by X. translucens pv. graminis have been reported ( Roberts and Vargas, 1984 ).…”
Bacterial wilt is a vascular wilt disease caused by Xanthomonas translucens pv. poae that infects Poa annua, a grass that is commonly found on golf course greens throughout the world. Bacterial wilt causes symptoms of etiolation, wilting, and foliar necrosis. The damage is most prevalent during the summer and the pathogen can kill turf under conditions optimal for disease development. Fifteen isolates of X. translucens pv. poae were collected from northern regions in the United States and tested for virulence against P. annua. All 15 isolates were pathogenic on P. annua, but demonstrated variable levels of virulence when inoculated onto P. annua under greenhouse conditions. The isolates were divided into two virulence groups. The first group containing four isolates generally resulted in less than 40% mortality following inoculation. The second group, containing the other eleven isolates, produced between 90 and 100% mortality following inoculation. These results suggest that differences in the virulence of bacterial populations present on a golf course may result in more or less severe amounts of observed disease.
“…Recently, a bacterial pathogen within the genus Acidovorax has been detected in association with creeping bentgrass decline and etiolation in the United States (12). This unique region of the United States, from the coastal states of Delaware, Maryland, and North Carolina and stretching eastward to Oklahoma and Kansas, creates difficult growing conditions for cool-season turfgrasses in the summer months.…”
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confidence: 99%
“…avenae found in association with an emerging enigmatic syndrome plaguing golf course putting greens in the United States (12) and Japan (10), there has been limited research on Acidovorax spp. avenae found in association with an emerging enigmatic syndrome plaguing golf course putting greens in the United States (12) and Japan (10), there has been limited research on Acidovorax spp.…”
Giordano, P. R., Chaves, A. M., Mitkowski, N. A., and Vargas, J. M., Jr. 2012. Identification, characterization, and distribution of Acidovorax avenae subsp. avenae associated with creeping bentgrass etiolation and decline. Plant Dis. 96:1736-1742.
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