• Title/Summary/Keyword: jujube witches'-broom

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Current Status of Phytoplasmas and their Related Diseases in Korea

  • Jung, Hee-Young;Win, Nang Kyu Kyu;Kim, Young-Hwan
    • The Plant Pathology Journal
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    • v.28 no.3
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    • pp.239-247
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    • 2012
  • Phytoplasmas have been associated with more than 46 plant species in Korea. Several vegetables, ornamentals, fruit trees and other crop species are affected by phytoplasma diseases. Six 16Sr groups of phytoplasmas have been identified and these phytoplasmas are associated with 63 phytoplasma diseases. Aster yellows phytoplasmas are the most prevalent group and has been associated with more than 25 diseases in Korea. Jujube witches' broom, paulownia witches' broom and mulberry dwarf diseases cause economic losses to host trees throughout the country. So far, Korean phytoplasmas belong to six species of 'Candidatus Phytoplasma'; 'Ca. P. asteris', 'Ca. P. pruni$^*$', 'Ca. P. ziziphi', 'Ca. P. trifolii', 'Ca. P. solani$^*$' and 'Ca. P. castaneae'. The diseases are distributed throughout the country and most of them were observed in Gyeongbuk and Chonbuk provinces. At least four insect vectors; Cyrtopeltis tenuis, Hishimonus sellatus, Macrosteles striifrons and Ophiola flavopicta have been identified for phytoplasma transmission.

Withes Broom of Jujube Tree, Zizyphus jujube Mill, Var. inermis Rehd.(Part.3) (대추나무 미친병에 관한 연구 3)

  • 김종진
    • Korean Journal of Microbiology
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    • v.3 no.1
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    • pp.1-6
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    • 1965
  • Over a period of 1962-64, a transmission-experiment of witchess' broom of jujube tree by stem-grafting was conducted. When stem-grafting of sound scions upon diseased roots or diseased scions upon sound roots were carried out, disease transmission of high rate was witnessed; 99% in the former and, in the latter, 62% of the stocks which saw union by callussing and had new shoots. Even when the diseased scions by stem-grafting or the diseased buds by budding upon sound stock died away, the transmission rate was 21% in stem-grafting and 14% in budding which seems to show that, when tissues of diseased plants and stocks are kept contacted over a certain period, the disease transmission occurs. And when the recovered scions taken from once diseased tree were grafted upon diseased roots, the transmission rate was 100 % and therefore it is presumed that the immunity could not be acquired even under the assumption of complete recovery from the disease. In stem-grafting of the diseased scions upon sound roots, 98% of the scions which were stored in the cellar, overwintered and grafted in spring was diseased, whereas the disease rate of the scions which were cut and grafted in spring was only 33%. It was particularly noteworthy that 90% of the scions in the former case and only 3% in the latter case were diseased as of June 18th approximately 2 months after the actual grafting and then the latter advanced to 33% with the passage of time. It appears that the pathogen in branches and shoots of the diseased trees standing outdoors become inactivated or diminished during winter. Through its symptom, pathological change in tissue, and easy transmission of the disease via stem-grafting, it seems certain that the pathogen of the witches broom disease in jujube tree is a virus.

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Control of Jujube Witches'-Broom by Post-Harvest Trunk Injection of Oxytetracycline (옥시테트라싸이클린의 수확후수간주입(收穫後樹幹注入)에 의(依)한 대추나무 빗자루병(病) 방제(防除))

  • Bak, Won Chull;La, Yong Joon
    • Journal of Korean Society of Forest Science
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    • v.82 no.1
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    • pp.12-16
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    • 1993
  • Post-harvest trunk injection of oxytetracycline-HCl(OTC) was attempted for the control of jujube witches'-broom. Diseased jujube(Zizyphus jujuba) trees with 9 to 16cm trunk diameters were treated with OTC ranged from 2g to 6g according to the size of trunk diameter. OTC dissolved in 0.51 or 1.01 of water was transfused into diseased trees by gravity flow injection during September and October. All these OTC concentrations prevented symptom development for two growing seasons and restored previously severely diseased trees to normal conditions. There was no differences in control effect between 0.51 and 1.01 OTC solutions. With these high OTC concentrations, no phytotoxicity was observed in the new leaves of the following year. Mycoplasma -like organism (MLO)-specific fluorescence was absent in the phloem of recovered tissue when examined by fluorescence microscopy using DAPI(4'-6-diamidino-2-phenylindole.2HCl) staining, indicating the disappearance of MLO by the action of OTC.

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Genetic Similarity Between Jujube Witches¡?Broom and Mulberry Dwarf Phytoplasmas Transmitted by Hishimonus sellatus Uhler

  • Cha, Byeongjin;Han, Sangsub
    • The Plant Pathology Journal
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    • v.18 no.2
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    • pp.98-101
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    • 2002
  • Using phytoplasma universal primer pair Pl and P7, a fragment of about 1.8 kb nucleotide sequences of 16S rRNA gene and 16S-23S rRNA intergenic spacer region, and a portion of 23S rRNA gene of jujube witches'broom (JWB) and mulberry dwarf(MD) phytoplasmas were determined. The nucleotide sequences of JWB and MD were 1,850 bp and 1,831 bp long, respectively. The JWB phytoplasma sequence was aligned with the homologous sequence of MD phytoplasma. Twenty-eight base insertions and nine base deletions were found in the JWB phytoplasma sequence compared with that of MD phytoplasma. The similarity of the aligned sequences of JWB and MD was 84.8%. The near-complete 16S rRNA gene DNA sequences of JWB and MD were 1,529 bp and 1,530 bp in length, respectively, and revealed 89.0% homology. The 16S-23S rRNA intergenic spacer region DNA sequences were 263 bp and 243 bp in lengths respectively, while homology was only 70% and the conserved tRNA-lle gene of JWB and MD was located into the intergenic space region between 16S-23S rRNA gene. The nucleotide sequences were 77 bp long in both JWB and MD, and showed 97.4% sequence homology. Based on the phylogenetic analysis of the two phytoplasmas, the JWB phytoplasma belongs to the Elm yellow phytoplasma group (16S rV), whereas, the MD phytoplasma belongs to the Aster yellow group (16S rI).

Hybridization Using a New Male-sterile Germplasm as the Female Parent in Chinese Jujube

  • Wang, Jiu-rui;Cui, Xiu-mei;Dai, Li;Liu, Ping;Zhao, Jin;Liu, Meng-jun
    • Horticultural Science & Technology
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    • v.33 no.3
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    • pp.396-402
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    • 2015
  • This study identified a new male-sterile germplasm of Chinese jujube, named male-sterile No. 2 (JMS2), and achieved controlled hybridization using that germplasm as the female parent. The anthers of JMS2 before flower bud opening became shrunken, dingy yellow and much smaller than normal ones, and they changed to brown after anthesis. No pollen was observed in anthers of JMS2 and its male-sterile trait remained stable over different years. A total of 1,642 fruits were obtained from ten intra- and interspecific cross combinations via controlled hybridization from 2008 to 2012 using JMS2 as the female parent. Of those, 27.3% produced seeds, on average (0-72.6%). The rate of fruit with seed (RFS) was significantly different between cross combinations or years. Compared to other cross combinations, the RFS in the combination of JMS2 ${\times}$ 'Xingguang' (a Chinese jujube cultivar with high resistance to jujube witches' broom disease) and JMS2 ${\times}$ 'Xing16' (a sour jujube genotype) remained high in different years and reached means of 48.7 and 58.1%, respectively. Finally, 150 plantlets were regenerated from immature embryos, and 51 of them were randomly selected and identified to be authentic hybrids using amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP) markers. This is the first report of hybrids obtained from a cross between Chinese jujube and sour jujube.

Host range and Bionomics of the Rhombic Marked Leafhopper, Hishimonus sellatus Uhler(Homoptera: Cicadelliae) as a Vector of the Jujube Witches-Broom Mycoplasma (대추나무빗자루병 매개충 "마름무늬매미충(Hishimonus sellatus Uhler)"의 기주범위 및 생태에 관한 연구)

  • 김규진;김미숙
    • Korean journal of applied entomology
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    • v.32 no.3
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    • pp.338-347
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    • 1993
  • The study was to investigate the bionomics, host plants, and oviposition preference of Hishimonus sellatus Uhler. It has 5 generations under natural conditions and the peak of the 3rd generation was observed about mid and late August. Its average developmental durations were 80 days in spring, 69 days in summer, and 77.8 days in autumn. The lengths of each stage were 0.8mm in eggs, 0.9mm in 1st instar, 1.4mm in 2nd instar, 2.1mm in 3rd instar, 2.5mm in 4th instar, 3.2mm in 5th instar, 4.1mm in female, and 3.8mm in male. Hishimonus sellatus overwintered as egg in Morus alba, Humulus japonicus, and Zizyphus jujuba begining mid October, and attacked the shoot of M. alba and H. japonicus about mid and late May, migrated to the Zizyphus jujuba from late June to early July. Female oviposites 32~62 eggs into epidermis of shoot, vagina and vein during their life. The preferred host plants of H. sellatus were Humulus japonicus, Morus alba, Zizyphus jujuba, and ligustrum obtusifolium. Highly preferable oviposition site was H. japonicus, M. albal, Z. jujuba, and L. obtusifolium, etc. On audlt longevity, the host plants as H. japonicus, M. alba, and Z. jujuba were 43$\pm$2 days and A. brevipedenculata, C. mimosoides, L. obtusifolium, V. rosa, A. sinicus and, A. graveolens were more than 25 days, and other host plants were less than 20 days.

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