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Diversity of Diaporthe species associated with wood cankers of fruit and nut crops in northern California
Diversity of Diaporthe species associated with wood cankers of fruit and nut crops in northern California
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Diversity of Diaporthe species associated with wood cankers of fruit and nut crops in northern California
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Diversity of Diaporthe species associated with wood cankers of fruit and nut crops in northern California
Diversity of Diaporthe species associated with wood cankers of fruit and nut crops in northern California

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Diversity of Diaporthe species associated with wood cankers of fruit and nut crops in northern California
Diversity of Diaporthe species associated with wood cankers of fruit and nut crops in northern California
Journal Article

Diversity of Diaporthe species associated with wood cankers of fruit and nut crops in northern California

2015
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Overview
Diaporthe ampelina, causal agent of Phomopsis cane and leaf spot of grapevine (Vitis vinifera L.) is isolated frequently from grapevine wood cankers, causing Phomopsis dieback. The latter disease is associated with four other Diaporthe species, three of which also are reported from hosts other than grape. To better understand the role of this Diaporthe community in Phomopsis dieback of grapevine and the potential for infection routes among alternate hosts, 76 Diaporthe isolates were recovered from wood cankers of cultivated grape, pear, apricot, almond and the wild host willow in four California counties. Isolates were characterized morphologically and assigned to species based on multigene sequence analyses. This study identified eight Diaporthe species from grapevine and one novel taxon from willow, D. benedicti. We report the first findings of D. australafricana and D. novem in North America. Our findings also expand the host ranges of D. ambigua to apricot and willow, D. australafricana to almond and willow, D. chamaeropis to grapevine and willow, D. foeniculina to willow and D. novem to almond. The generalists D. ambigua and D. eres were the most genetically diverse species, based on high nucleotide and haplotypic diversity, followed by the grapevine specialist D. ampelina. Analyses based on multilocus linkage disequilibrium could not reject the hypothesis of random mating for D. ambigua, which is further supported by relatively high haplotypic diversity, reports of both mating types and reports of successful matings in vitro. Pathogenicity assays revealed that D. ampelina was the most pathogenic species to grapevine wood.