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Diplodia twig canker (Diplodia gallae) of northern red oak (Quercus rubra) in the northeastern United States
Authors:Nicholas J Brazee  Isabel A Munck  Kelsey McLaughlin  Savannah Ferreira  Nicole Keleher
Institution:1. Center for Agriculture Food and the Environment, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, Massachusetts, USA;2. Northeastern Area State and Private Forestry, USDA Forest Service, Durham, New Hampshire, USA;3. Forest Health Diagnostic Lab, New York State Department of Environmental Conservation, Avon, New York, USA;4. Department of Forests, Parks and Recreation, Randolph Center, Vermont, USA;5. Forest Health Program, Massachusetts Department of Conservation and Recreation, Amherst, Massachusetts, USA
Abstract:The 2015–2018 outbreak of spongy moth (Lymantria dispar) in southern New England initiated a severe oak decline and mortality event. While defoliation was a primary driver, increased secondary pest and pathogen activity contributed to decline and death. Following this large defoliation event, Diplodia was frequently recovered from northern red oaks (Quercus rubra) with serious outbreaks of twig cankering. Given the many recent reports of Diplodia corticola on oak in eastern North America, it was presumed to be the causal agent. To confirm, a limited survey was conducted from five states in the region (Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New York, and Vermont). Based on ITS, tef1 and tub2 sequences generated from 28 isolates collected primarily from northern red oak, Diplodia gallae, two potentially novel Diplodia species and Diplodia sapinea were identified. Surprisingly, D. corticola was not found in this study. ITS sequences alone failed to discriminate among isolates of D. gallae and D. corticola, creating uncertainty over previous reports of D. corticola in eastern North America. Only a combined ITS + tef1 dataset successfully distinguished D. gallae and D. corticola along with two other closely related species that also occur on oak (Diplodia quercicola and Diplodia quercivora). Additional cankering and endophytic fungi (Coryneum, Dendrostoma, Gnomoniopsis, Pestalotiopsis and Tubakia) were also found on symptomatic oaks in the region. Identification of Diplodia isolates from non-Quercus hosts also detected Diplodia neojuniperi on Juniperus chinensis and Microbiota decussata, which has not been reported previously in North America.
Keywords:Diplodia corticola  Diplodia neojuniperi  fungal cankering  ITS sequencing  oak decline  oak dieback  spongy moth
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