Leaf Spot Disease of Spinach
in California Caused by
Stemphylium botryosum

This article by S. T. Koike, D. M. Henderson, and E. E. Butler,
appeared in "Plant Dis." 85:126-130.

eginning in 1997, a new disease of spinach was found in the Salinas Valley, Monterey County, California. Initial symptoms were leaf spots that were 2 to 5 mm. in diameter, circular, and gray-green in color. Spots later enlarged, turned tan in color, and became dry and papery in texture, resembling phytotoxicity due to agrochemicals.

Although fungal signs were generally absent from the spots, Stemphylium botryosum was consistently isolated, and caused identical symptoms when inoculated onto 20 spinach cultivars. Three isolates did not cause disease symptoms when inoculated onto other crop plants representing 16 different genera and a Chenopodium weed species. A fourth isolate showed similar results with the exception of small leaf spots occurring on inoculated fava bean.

Isolates produced Pleospora herbarum teleomorph after 7 months incubations at 5 degrees C. Preliminary experiments with cell-free culture filtrates indicated that phytotoxins apparently were not produced by these isolates. This is the first report of a foliar spinach disease caused by S. botryosum.

To return to the April 2001 issue of Vegetable Production and Marketing News, click on this button


This article appeared in the April 2001 issue of Vegetable Production & Marketing News, edited by Frank J. Dainello, Ph.D., and produced by Extension Horticulture, Texas Agricultural Extension Service, The Texas A&M University System, College Station, Texas.