Hudler, G.W., 2013. Phytophthora cactorum. Forest Phytophthoras 3(1). doi:10.5399/osu/fp.3.1.3396
Phytophthora cactorum
Overview
Phytophthora cactorum (Leb. and Cohn) Schröeter has a long history in the plant pathological literature, having first been described as Peronospora cactorum - a pathogen of cacti - in 1870 (Lebert and Cohn, 1870) and subsequently found worldwide on well over 250 plant species in at least 150 genera (Erwin and Ribeiro 1996). With respect to forest trees, the potential for P. cactorum to cause disease across a wide range of hosts became evident early on inasmuch as Hartig (1876, 1880, 1882, 1883) recovered the organism from dying seedlings in the genera Abies, Acacia, Acer, Cedrus, Fagus, Larix, Picea, Pinus, and Robinia. Since then, P. cactorum has been reported from 21 additional genera of forest trees and from some commercially important roseaceous fruit trees.
Morphology
Mycelia grow on a wide array of common laboratory media including PDA, CMA, LBA and V8A. P. cactorum readily fruits in culture or on plant tissue used as bait, producing caducous, usually terminal, pear-shaped sporangia, each on a short (< 4μm long) pedicel. The generative pedicels may be simple and well-spaced, but more often they are clustered and may even have a sympodial arrangement. Sporangia have prominent papillae and are typically 30 μm long (+/- 5μm) and 26 μm (+/- 4 μm) wide. Some, but not all, isolates produce chlamydospores, usually at the tip of generative hyphae but occasionally via intercalary formation. When they do occur, chlamydospores have moderately thick cell walls (1-1.5 μm) and range from 25-40 μm dia. Sexual reproduction in P. cactorum is uniformly homothallic with paragynous antheridia.
Genetics
P. cactorum is placed in Clade 1a (http://www.phytophthoradb.org/species), most closely related to P. pseudotsugae, a pathogen of Douglas-fir seedlings in the Pacific Northwest states in the U.S. Only one other noteworthy forest tree pathogen - P. nicotianae - is in Clade I, but two important pathogens of agricultural crops - P. infestans and P. phaseoli - are also closely related (Clade 1c).
Growth
Because of the high importance of P. cactorum as one of several species causing crown rot in apple orchards throughout the world, more effort seems to have gone into study of detection and recovery of the pathogen from orchard soils and associated host plant tissue than from other plant species. Typically, isolation follows baiting soil or soil extract with one or more plant parts including fruit (apple, pear, strawberry, etc.), hemp or rape seeds, and (rarely) pine needles. In an extensive study of sampling methods, Jeffers found that 2-4 day old apple seedlings were uniquely suited to recovery of the pathogen from New York orchard soils, and it would seem prudent for others who are trying to get complete assays of soils anywhere to include the seedlings as baits. Jeffers also found that it was important to dry soil samples for a time and then rewet them prior to baiting. Failure to do that often led to gross underestimation of pathogen populations.
In any case, necrotic tissue developing on whatever bait has been used is then transferred to a selective medium that typically has cornmeal agar as its base and has been amended with antibiotics and antifungal compounds, especially pimaricin, rifampicin, PCNB and hymexazol. One noteworthy observation by Jeffers was that enough of his strains were so sensitive to hymexazol that further assays for the pathogen should probably include some hymexazol-free media as an alternative to conventional selective recipes.
Gross morphology of cultures is unremarkable, described by Erwin and Ribeiro in comparison to other common species as a "less defined petaloid colony" with the amount of growth of submerged mycelium approximately equal to that occurring above the agar surface. Hyphae are coenocytic, usually less than 6 μm wide and often irregularly shaped with randomly placed, slight swellings and loose coralloid growth; nothing that seems to be of value in distinction from many other species.
Distinguishing Characteristics for Identification
In the absence of nucleic acid sequences, a reasonably reliable distinction of P. cactorum from other Phytophthora species with similar morphology can be made with observation that the isolate in question (1) is homothallic, (2) has paragynous antheridia that arise from the parent hypha very close to - if not intertwined with - the oogonium stalk, (3) has plerotic and aplerotic oospores, and (4) produces caducous and conspicuously papillate sporangia with one apex and a short pedicel. P. cactorum also produces chlamydospores when stressed.
Two species possibly confused with P. cactorum based solely on morphological features are P. hedraiandra (compare: antheridia sessile or on very short stalks) and P. clandestina (compare: sporangia with multiple papillae and a conspicuous basal plug, stubbornly caducous until zoospore release, hyphal swellings common). Unlike P. cactorum, P. hedraiandra and P. clandestina can have both paragynous and amphigynous antheridial attachments.
Host range and geographic distribution of the various isolates can also be helpful. P. cactorum has a wide range of plant hosts and occurs in temperate sites throughout the globe. In contrast, P. hedraiandra is so far known only attacking rhodendron and viburnum plants in a few sites in Minnesota and Virginia (USA) and the Netherlands, Italy and Spain (Europe). Similarly, P. clandestina has been found only attacking subterranean clover in Australia.
In the event that one starts first with nucleic acid sequences and then presumes to confirm ID by morphological features, the closest relative on the phylogenetic tree, P. pseudotsugae, has noncaducous, predominantly spherical sporangia and oospores that are up to 20%(= 5μm) larger in diameter than those of P. cactorum.
Overall, P. cactorum is among those species of Phytophthora that can be readily identified by morphology from isolation plates. P. cactorum is the only one having exclusively paragynous antheridial attachment among all homothallic species producing caducous and conspicuously papillate sporangia with a short pedicel.
Disease History
Phytophthora cactorum has a long history in the plant pathological literature, having first been described as Peronospora cactorum - a pathogen of cacti - in 1870 (Lebert and Cohn, 1870) and subsequently found worldwide on well over 250 plant species in at least 150 genera (Erwin and Ribeiro 1996). With respect to forest trees, the potential for P. cactorum to cause disease across a wide range of hosts became evident early on inasmuch as Hartig (1876, 1880, 1882, 1883) recovered the organism from dying seedlings in the genera Abies, Acacia, Acer, Cedrus, Fagus, Larix, Picea, Pinus, and Robinia. Since then, P. cactorum has been reported from 21 additional genera of forest trees and from some commercially important roseaceous fruit trees.
In most cases, P. cactorum has been associated with crown and collar rot or damping off of forest tree seedlings and as such has been inadvertently managed in nurseries as part of routine maintenance programs to minimize damping off. However, certain strains have occasionally been associated with more serious problems such as lethal root collar cankers on Abies, Acer, and Cornus.
Of particular concern and deserving of considerably more attention than is currently available are the frequent reports of debilitating - if not lethal - bleeding stem cankers on deciduous trees worldwide. Affected genera include Acer, Aesculus, Betula, Castanea,Fagus, Juglans, Liquidamber, Ostrya, Quercus, Salix, Tilia, and Ulmus . Virtually every one of these reports has been generated by someone who was sufficiently concerned about the propensity of field symptoms to feel compelled to bring it to the scientific community. More often than not, the concerning episode seems to resolve itself without further human intervention and the report becomes little more than an addition to the historical record. But one has to wonder why these events come and go as they do and whether some other Phytophthora-caused diseases of grave concern were once written off or ignored because they, too, disappeared as quickly as they appeared.
Impacts in the Forest
Despite the broad geographic distribution and diverse host range of P. cactorum, it seems to be causing little concerning damage to forest trees. One recent report from the Czech Republic (Cerny et al. 2009) indicates that an "outbreak" there caused noticeable damage to Fagus, Betula and (for the first time ever?) Populus, but there has been no follow-up to suggest that the incidence of the disease continued to attract attention. Perhaps one reason for the sporadic reports of these diseases in forest communities is that the little evidence available suggests that there is considerable host specificity among strains of the pathogen. In the most recent study of this phenomenon, strains from strawberries had no effect on birch trees from which a "birch strain" of P. cactorum had been isolated. Similarly, the "birch strain" failed to cause disease on strawberries. Given the heterogeneous nature of many forest communities and the presumably limited ability of predominantly soil-borne pathogens like P. cactorum to move readily to new hosts, evolution of such host specificity may be the norm and, as such, minimize intra-host spread.
Forest and Wildland Hosts and Symptoms
The table of susceptible hosts below includes only the most ecologically and economically important host species.
Host Latin Name | Host Common Name | Symptoms | Habitat | Region | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Abies amabilis | Pacific silver fir | Seedling disease | Forest tree nurseries | USA | |
Abies balsamea | Balsam fir | Collar rot | Forest tree nurseries | USA | |
Abies fraseri | Fraser fir | Seedling disease | Forest tree nurseries, Plantations | USA | |
Acacia spp. | Acacia | Seedling disease | Ornamental Nursery | Germany | |
Acer macrophyllum | Bigleaf maple | Canker | Forest, Residential | USA | |
Acer palmatum | Japanese maple | Europe | |||
Acer platanoides | Norway maple | Canker, Seedling disease | Ornamental Nursery, Residential | England, Europe, USA | |
Acer pseudoplatanus | Sycamore maple | Canker | Forest, Residential | France, Germany, USA | |
Acer rubrum | Red maple | Canker, Leaf necrosis | Residential | USA | |
Acer saccharum | Sugar maple | Canker | Forest | USA | |
Acer tatricum | Tartarian Maple | Leaf necrosis | |||
Aesculus hippocastanum | Horse chestnut | Canker | Residential | Europe, USA | |
Alnus oregona | Red alder | Canker | Forest | USA | |
Arbutus menziesii | Madrone | Canker | Forest, Residential | USA - Pacific Northwest | |
Betula penduca | Birch | Europe | |||
Castanea sativa | European chestnut | Canker | Forest | Italy | |
Cedrus deodara | Deodar cedar | Seedling disease | Ornamental Nursery | Germany, USA, USSR | |
Cornus florida | Flowering dogwood | Collar rot | Ornamental Nursery, Residential | USA | |
Cornus nuttallii | Dogwood | Canker | Forest, Residential | USA | |
Fagus grandifolia | American beech | Seedling disease | Ornamental Nursery | Czech Republic, Denmark, England, Germany, Poland, Switzerland, USA | |
Fagus sylvatica | European Beech | Canker | Czech Republic, Germany, Italy, USA | ||
Fraxinus spp. | Ash | Seedling disease | Forest tree nurseries, Ornamental Nursery | England | |
Juglans californica | Southern California black walnut | Collar rot | USA, USA - California | ||
Juglans hindsii | Northern California black walnut | Collar rot | USA, USA - California | ||
Juglans nigra | Black walnut | Seedling disease | Ornamental Nursery | Italy, USA | |
Juglans pyriformis | Mexican walnut | Canker | Residential | USA | |
Juglans regia | English walnut | Canker | Residential | Italy, USA | |
Larix decidua | European larch | Seedling disease | Forest tree nurseries | England, Germany, Netherlands | |
Liquidambar styraciflua | Sweetgum | Canker | Forest | USA | |
Liriodendron tulipifera | Tulip tree | Canker | Forest | USA, USA - Southeast | |
Picea abies | Norway spruce | Seedling disease | Forest tree nurseries, Ornamental Nursery | Germany, Italy | |
Pinus coulteri | Big cone pine | Seedling disease | Native plant nursery | USA | |
Pinus mugo | Swiss mountain pine | Seedling disease | Ornamental Nursery | USA | |
Pinus muricata | Bishop pine | Seedling disease | Forest tree nurseries | USA | |
Pinus nigra | Black pine | Seedling disease | Ornamental Nursery | Canada, USA | |
Pinus ponderosa | Ponderosa pine | Seedling disease | Forest tree nurseries | Germany, USA | |
Pinus resinosa | Red pine | Seedling disease | Forest tree nurseries | USA | |
Pinus strobus | Eastern white pine | Seedling disease | Forest tree nurseries | Germany, USA | |
Pinus sylvestris | Scots pine | Seedling disease | Forest tree nurseries | Bulgaria, Sweden, United Kingdom | |
Platanus occidentalis | American sycamore, Sycamore | Seedling disease | Ornamental Nursery | Europe | |
Populus alba | White poplar | Canker | Residential | Czech Republic | |
Prunus avium | Wild plum | Canker | Forest | USA | |
Pseudotsuga menziesii | Douglas-fir | Root rot | Forest tree nurseries | USA - Pacific Northwest | |
Quercus lobata | California white oak | Seedling disease | Native plant nursery | USA | |
Robinia pseudoacacia | Black locust | Seedling disease | Ornamental Nursery | Germany | |
Salix scoulerana | Mountain willow | Canker | Wildland | USA | |
Tilia sp. | Linden | Canker | Residential | USA | |
Tsuga orientalis | Cypress | Canker | Residential | USA | |
Ulmus spp. | Elm | Canker | Forest, Residential | USA |