First Report of Zonate Leaf Spot of Artocarpus altilis Caused by Cristulariella moricola in Taiwan

2002 
Breadfruit (Artocarpus altilis (Parkinson) Fosberg) is an important landscape and garden tree in Taiwan. During the spring of 2002, zonate leaf spots of breadfruit were observed at a Taipei nursery in northern Taiwan. Initially, several small, brown, zonate lesions developed on leaves. As lesions enlarged, they coalesced, leading to blighting of leaves and premature defoliation. Sporophores on the host were generally hypophyllous but sometimes amphigenous, solitary, erect, easily detachable, and as much as 850 μm long. The upper portion of the sporophore is considered an individual conidium and consisted of a pyramidal head that was fusiform to ventricose and cristulate, 495 to 534 μm long and 210 to 290 μm wide at the broadest point. Branches within the pyramidal head were short and compact, and dichotomously or trichotomously branched. The conidia were hyaline, broad, septate, tapering toward an acute apex, and sometimes constricted at the basal septum. Conidiophores were 400 to 680 × 20 to 100 μm. The ...
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