Vol 50, Supplement (2011), 7th IWGTD - Special issue on Grapevine Trunk Diseases
Review

The status of Botryosphaeriaceae species infecting grapevines

Jose URBEZ-TORRES
Pacific Agri-Food Research Centre

Published 2011-12-18

Keywords

  • Black dead arm,
  • black rot,
  • Botryosphaeriaceae,
  • Botryosphaeria canker,
  • Botryosphaeria dieback,
  • excoriose,
  • grapevine trunk diseases,
  • Macrophoma rot
  • ...More
    Less

How to Cite

[1]
J. URBEZ-TORRES, “The status of Botryosphaeriaceae species infecting grapevines”, Phytopathol. Mediterr., vol. 50, no. 4, pp. 5–45, Dec. 2011.

Abstract

Species in the Botryosphaeriaceae have a cosmopolitan distribution, and occur on a wide range of annual and perennial hosts including grapevines. To date, morphological and taxonomic studies, as well as analyses of nucleotide sequences of multiple genes, have allowed the identification of at least 21 different species in the Botryosphaeriaceae occurring in grapevines worldwide. Grapevine disease symptoms caused by members of this family include leaf spots, fruit rots, shoot dieback, bud necrosis, vascular discoloration of the wood, and perennial cankers, and their current status as pathogens is reviewed. Additionally, the disease name Botryosphaeria dieback is proposed here to describe the different grapevine trunk disease symptoms caused by species of Botryosphaeriaceae. Much has been written during the last decade about the association between species in the Botryosphaeriaceae and grapevine trunk diseases, which has contributed to a better understanding of the role that these fungal taxa play in grapevine diseases. Although virulence has been shown to vary between species and isolates of the same species in different countries, these fungi have become well-recognized as important grapevine pathogens worldwide. Latest and novel findings from studies conducted in different countries, on disease etiology and species distribution, epidemiology and biology are discussed. Much progress has been achieved in the development and implementation of novel diagnostic and detection techniques.Vineyard sanitation techniques, as well as chemical, biological, and cultural control strategies available at the present time to reduce the infection caused by botryosphaeriaceous fungi, are presented in this review.

 

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