Isolation, Identification and Pathogenicity of Fungal Pathogen (S) Causing Black Sigatoka Disease of Local Plantain and Banana in Ghana
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University of Ghana
Abstract
A study was conducted at the Crop Science
Department, University of Ghana, Legon, to isolate,
identify and test pathogenecity of fungal isolates
causing the reported black sigatoka disease of plantain
in Ghana and compare the isolate with that isolated from
local tall banana having leaf spots.
Field symptoms of plantain and banana were compared
and found to be similar. Initial specks indicating
infection were minute, reddish-brown and were conspicuous
only on the abaxial leaf surfaces on both plants. Specks
turned dark-brown and later dark-black with adjoining
yellow margins. The dark black areas dried out and
turned grey on both plants.
The fungi species were isolated from necrosed banana
and plantain leaves by Ascospore Discharge Technique.
Ascospores from necrosed banana and plantain leaves were
hyaline, two-celled, with one cell larger than the other
and measured 13.9 by 3-2um and 13.8um by 3.2um
respectively. Ascospores of both isolates germinated in
Sterile Distilled Water (SDW) after 1^/2 hours and on PDA
and Carrot Leaf Decoction Agar (CDA) between 12-18 hours
and in all cases by bipolar germ tubes. No sporulation
was observed for both isolates in SDW. Colony growth of
both isolates on PDA and CDA were extremely slow and
mycelia compact, erumpent, appearing dome-shaped from
side view, and with a hard rind on the surface. Sporulation was not observed on PDA for both
isolates,but profuse sporulation was observed on CDA six
days after inoculation. Conidia in culture was
Cercospora-type, with thickened hilum. Conidia of the
plantain and banana isolates on the average measured
18 .lum by 3.6um and 78.4um by 3.'Sum, respectively.
Greenhouse inoculations revealed that the plantain
isolate on plantain had an incubation period of 18 days,
whilst the banana isolate pathogenic on the local tall
banana also had an incubation period of 23 days. Symptoms
in both cases were typical for black sigatoka and
progressed to the mature-spot stage with grey centres.
Cross-infection studies in the greenhouse revealed
that plantain isolate of M. fijiensis was pathogenic on
local tall banana with incubation periods of 29 days, and
which produced typical black Sigatoka symptoms until the
mature spot stage. Plantain ascospore inoculation on
local tall banana also produced black sigatoka symptoms
with 21 days of incubation period, after which symptoms
progressed to the mature spot stage.
On plantain, the banana isolate of M. fijiensis took
26 days for specks to appear and symptoms which were
typical for black sigatoka progressed to the mature-spot
stage. Control plants in the greenhouse did not develop
symptoms. Neither ascospores nor conidia were produced
in the greenhouse on inoculated plants due to
unfavourable environmental factors thus rendering
reisolation of the fungus from diseased leaves
impossible.
University of Ghana http://ugspace.ug.edu.gh
The study therefore established that black sigatoka
disease in Ghana is found on both plantain and the local
tall banana, with the causal agent being Mycosphaerella
fijiensis Morelet.
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Thesis(MPhil)-University of Ghana, 1996