First Report of Puccinia canaliculata on Sunflower

Plant Disease
T J Gulya, W D Stegmeier

Abstract

Puccinia canaliculata (Schwein.) Lagerh. is a macrocyclic, heteroecious rust found on Cyperus spp. (sedges) in North and South America, with the aecial stage reported on Asteraceae (1). In July 1997, aecial pustules of unknown etiology were observed on lower leaves of more than 90% of cultivated sunflower (Helianthus annuus L.) plants at the 6- to 10-leaf stage in a field near Catherine, KS. Individual leaves had one to several large, convex pustules, each measuring 5 to 10 mm in diameter, covering <0.5% of the leaf area. In contrast, the aecial pustules of P. helianthi measure 1 to 2 mm in diameter. Yellow-orange aecial cups occurred on the abaxial leaf surface, with globoid aeciospores averaging 15 × 18.5 μm. Wild common sunflowers (H. annuus) and cocklebur (Xanthium strumarium L.) in the same and two nearby fields had similar pustules. There was a severe infestation of yellow nutsedge (C. esculentus L.) in the sunflower field, but uredia were not found because the nutsedge plants had been killed with glyphosate. Based on the size of aecia, aeciospores, and peridial cells from sunflower and cockelbur (3), the fungus was identified as P. canaliculata. Although sunflower is an alternate host (2), to our knowledge this is the fi...Continue Reading

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