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Plant Pathogens

Large-spored Drechslera gigantea is a Bipolaris species causing disease on the invasive grass Microstegium vimineum

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Pages 921-931 | Received 14 Jan 2020, Accepted 09 Jun 2020, Published online: 23 Jul 2020
 

ABSTRACT

Environmentally damaging invasive plants can also serve as reservoir hosts for agricultural pathogens. Microstegium vimineum is an invasive C4 annual grass that is present throughout the midwestern and eastern United States. It can reach high densities in disturbed areas such as crop-forest interfaces, which creates the potential for pathogen spillover from M. vimineum to agricultural crops and native plants. A previous study that surveyed disease on M. vimineum found a large-spored Bipolaris species that was widespread on M. vimineum and also isolated from co-occurring native grasses. Here, we report that the large-spored fungus isolated from M. vimineum and the native grass Elymus virginicus is Drechslera gigantea, based on comparison with published descriptions of morphological traits, and establish that D. gigantea is a pathogen of M. vimineum and E. virginicus. We review the phylogenetic placement and taxonomic history of D. gigantea and propose that it be reassigned to the genus Bipolaris as Bipolaris gigantea.

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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

We thank Amy Kendig, Chris Wojan, Romana Anjum, Patricia Rayside, and Mike Stilwell for assistance in the field, laboratory, and greenhouse. We are grateful to Desiree Szarka, Nicole Ward Gauthier, and Christopher Schardl for advice on multilocus sequencing of this fungus.

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Supplemental data for this article can be accessed on the publisher’s website.

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Funding

This work was funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF) grant NSF-DEB 1257741 and the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) award 2017-67013-26870 as part of the joint USDA-NSF-National Institutes of Health (NIH) Ecology and Evolution of Infectious Diseases program.

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