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RESEARCH ARTICLE

Identification of a new race of Hemileia vastatrix in Brazil

P. G. C. Cabral A , E. M. Zambolim A , L. Zambolim A C , T. P. Lelis A , A. S. Capucho A and E. T. Caixeta B
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A Departamento de Fitopatologia, Universidade Federal de Viçosa, 36570-000, Viçosa, M.G., Brazil.

B Embrapa Café, Parque Estação Biológica, Av. W3 Norte, 70770-901, Brasília, D.F., Brazil.

C Corresponding author. Email: zambolim@ufv.br

Australasian Plant Disease Notes 4(1) 129-130 https://doi.org/10.1071/DN09052
Submitted: 12 November 2009  Accepted: 23 November 2009   Published: 14 December 2009

Abstract

In this study, a survey of physiological races of Hemileia vastatrix was carried out on 34 coffee leaf rust populations collected at several coffee genotypes in Brazil. After the inoculation on leaf disc of coffee differential clones, the races I, II, III, XIII, XVII and XXXVII were characterised. This is the first report of race XXXVII on Coffea arabica in Brazil, which shows the evolutionary potential of H. vastatrix. The emergence of complex races like XXXVII represents a challenge for breeders in the development of resistant cultivars.

Coffee leaf rust caused by Hemileia vastatrix Berk. et Br. is the most devastating disease on Coffea arabica in Brazil. The fungus is largely distributed in all the coffee-growing areas of the country, causing losses between 10% and 40% (Silva et al. 2006).

The development of coffee varieties with durable resistance to coffee leaf rust has been a challenge due to the great genetic variability of H. vastatrix populations. In the pathosystem coffee versus coffee leaf rust, 45 pathogenic races of H. vastatrix were described in the world (Várzea and Marques 2005). In Brazil, previous studies differentiated 14 races identified as I, II, III, VII, X, XIII, XV, XVI, XVII, XXI, XXII, XXIII, XXIV, XXV or XXXI. The race II is the most widely distributed in Brazil (Zambolim et al. 2005). Considering that no other studies have been carried out in the country since 2002 and the loss of resistance in some improved commercial coffee varieties, this survey aimed to identify the current physiological races of H. vastatrix occurring in Brazil.

This survey analysed 34 populations of H. vastatrix collected from diseased leaves of Coffea arabica, C. canephora and interspecific hybrids in the States of Minas Gerais, Espírito Santo and São Paulo, which represents the main production area of commercial coffee in Brazil. The urediniospores of H. vastatrix were collected from the infected leaves with a gelatin capsule and stored inside glass ampoules sealed with cotton. The ampoules were maintained inside a desiccator contained a sulfuric acid solution (density of 1.8 and concentration of 32.6%) to maintain the relative humidity around 50% at 5°C (Zambolim and Chaves 1974). Each sample was inoculated in the susceptible plants Catuaí Vermelho (Coffea arabica) or in the clone 02 of Coffea canephora in order to obtain the amount of urediniospores necessary for physiological race differentiation. Only urediniospores with a viability superior to 30% were considered appropriate for the inoculation tests (Capucho et al. 2009). The inoculations in the differential clones were done according to a leaf disc methodology (Eskes 1982) with modifications. Urediniospores from each of 34 H. vastatrix populations were individually inoculated with a camelhair brush over the abaxial surface of nine leaf discs of each coffee differential clone. Each set of inoculated leaf discs per clone was then transferred to a polystyrene box (11 × 11 × 3 cm) containing a nylon and foam fabric saturated with water. The leaf discs were then sprayed with distilled water to maintain the moisture around 100% (Fig. 1). The gerbox containing the leaf discs were closed and stored in the dark for 48 h at 24°C, and then transferred to a chamber under controlled temperature and light conditions (22°C, 12 h fluorescent light). After this period the inoculated leaf discs were cleaned with sterilised cotton to eliminate non-germinated urediniospores and hyperparasitic contaminants (Capucho et al. 2009).


Fig. 1.  Scheme showing the inoculation of Hemileia vastatrix using the leaf disc method. (A) spread of urediniospores in the leaf disc with the help of a camelhair brush; (B) abaxial water-spraying of the leaf discs after inoculation; (C) urediniospores on abaxial epidermis of the susceptible cv. Catuaí.
F1

The characterisation of the physiological races present in the 34 populations of H. vastatrix was done based on the readings of the phenotypic expression (absence or presence of urediniospores) on the inoculated coffee leaf discs of the differential clones (Fig. 1). The evaluation started when the first urediniospores formed on the abaxial surface of the leaves on the susceptible controls (Catuaí Vermelho and clone 02 of C. canephora). Four evaluations were carried out at 7-day intervals and the recorded results were compared with the data described in the literature (Várzea and Marques 2005).

In the 34 evaluated populations the races I, II, III, XIII, XVII and XXXVII were identified (Table 1). Race I was characterised in five populations. Race II was predominantly found in 65% of the evaluated samples. Race III was identified in four samples and races XIII, XVII, XXXVII in one sample each.


Table 1.  Physiological races of Hemileia vastatrix identified by coffee differential clones
T1

This is the first report of the occurrence of race XXXVII in Brazil. This complex race was identified in a sample collected at Minas Gerais State in a growing C. arabica Catuaí Vermelho field located at 1137 m altitude, 19°40′91 S and 46°13′58 W. This find is of extreme importance due to the potential of this race to infect all the coffee rust-resistant varieties available to the producers in Brazil. This race has five virulence genes in its genetic constitution (v2,5,6,7,9) able to infect the differentiators of five physiologic groups of Coffea: groups D, E, R, 1 and 3.

Therefore, it is of great importance to study how this race is disseminated and its capability to cause an epidemic in the country.



Acknowledgements

The authors acknowledge the Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de Minas Gerais (FAPEMIG), Consórcio Brasileiro de Pesquisa e Desenvolvimento do Café (CBP&D), Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq) and Ministério da Agricultura Pecuária e Abastecimento (MAPA) for providing financial support. P.G.C. Cabral and A.S. Capucho acknowledge the Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico – CNPq for providing the student grant.


References


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