A new brown rot disease of plum caused by Mucor xinjiangensis sp. nov. and screening of its chemical control

Front Microbiol. 2024 Sep 10:15:1458456. doi: 10.3389/fmicb.2024.1458456. eCollection 2024.

Abstract

A novel species of Mucor was identified as the causal agent of a brown rot of Prunus domestica (European plum), widely grown in the south of Xinjiang, China. This disease first appears as red spots after the onset of the fruits. With favorable environmental conditions, fruit with infected spots turn brown, sag, expand, wrinkle, and harden, resulting in fruit falling. Fungal species were isolated from infected fruits. A phylogenetic analysis based on internal transcribed spacer (ITS) regions and the large subunit (LSU) of the nuclear ribosomal RNA (rRNA) gene regions strongly supported that these isolates made a distinct evolutionary lineage in Mucor (Mucoromycetes, Mucoraceae) that represents a new taxonomic species, herein named as Mucor xinjiangensis. Microscopic characters confirmed that these strains were morphologically distinct from known Mucor species. The pathogenicity of M. xinjiangensis was confirmed by attaching an agar disk containing mycelium on fruits and re-isolation of the pathogen from symptomatic tissues. Later, fourteen fungicides were selected to determine the inhibitory effect on the pathogen. Further, results showed that difenoconazole had the best effect on the pathogen and the strongest toxicity with the smallest half maximal effective concentration (EC50) value, followed by a compound fungicide composed of difenoconazole with azoxystrobin, mancozeb, prochloraz with iprodione, pyraclostrobin with tebuconazole, and trifloxystrobin with tebuconazole and ethhylicin. Present study provides the basis for the prevention and control of the novel plum disease and its pathogen.

Keywords: Prunus domestica (European plum); Xinjiang (China); chemical control; new taxon; plant pathogen; taxonomy.

Grants and funding

The author(s) declare financial support was received for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article. This study was financially supported by the Project of Renovation Capacity Building for the Young Sci-Tech Talents sponsored by Xinjiang Academy of Agricultural Sciences (xjnkq-2020020), Forestry development subsidy funds of Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region (XJLYKJ-2023-19), Project of Fund for Stable Support to Agricultural Sci-Tech Renovation (xjnkywdzc-2022004). M. Raza is grateful to the High-Level Talent Recruitment plan of Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region (“Young Talents” Program) and the second phase of the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region “Tianchi Talents” introduction plan, 2023.