Quambalaria species: increasing threat to eucalypt plantations in Australia

Spotted gum (Corymbia citriodora subsp. variegata and C. maculata) is a valuable source of commercial timber and suitable for a wide range of different soil types in eastern Australia. The main biological constraint to further expansion of spotted gum plantations is Quambalaria shoot blight caused by the fungus Quambalaria pitereka. Surveys conducted to evaluate the impact of Quambalaria shoot blight have shown that the disease is present in all spotted gum plantations and on a range of Corymbia species and hybrids in subtropical and tropical regions surveyed in eastern Australia. More recently, Q. eucalypti has also been identified from a range of Eucalyptus species in these regions. Both pathogens have also been found associated with foliage blight and die-back of amenity trees and Q. pitereka in native stands of Corymbia species, which is the probable initial infection source for plantations. Infection by Q. pitereka commonly results in the repeated destruction of the growing tips and the subsequent formation of a bushy crown or death of trees in severe cases. In comparison, Q. eucalypti causes small, limited lesions and has in some cases been associated with insect feeding. It has not been recorded as causing severe shoot and stem blight. A better understanding of factors influencing disease development and host–pathogen interactions is essential in the development of a disease management strategy for these poorly understood but important pathogens in the rapidly expanding eucalypt (Corymbia and Eucalyptus spp.) plantation industry in subtropical and tropical eastern Australia.

[1]  A. Carnegie Forest health condition in New South Wales, Australia, 1996–2005. II. Fungal damage recorded in eucalypt plantations during forest health surveys and their management , 2007, Australasian Plant Pathology.

[2]  M. Wingfield,et al.  Quambalaria leaf and shoot blight on Eucalyptus nitens in South Africa , 2006, Australasian Plant Pathology.

[3]  David J. Lee Achievements in forest tree genetic improvement in Australia and New Zealand 2: Development of Corymbia species and hybrids for plantations in eastern Australia , 2007 .

[4]  M. Wingfield,et al.  DNA-based identification of Quambalaria pitereka causingsevere leaf blight of Corymbia citriodora in China , 2007 .

[5]  Pedro W. Crous,et al.  Phylogeny of the Quambalariaceae fam. nov., including important Eucalyptus pathogens in South Africa and Australia , 2006, Studies in mycology.

[6]  M. Wingfield,et al.  Sporothrix eucalypti (sp. nov.), a shoot and leaf pathogen ofEucalyptus in South Africa , 1993, Mycopathologia.

[7]  G. Dickinson,et al.  Early plantation growth and tolerance to ramularia shoot blight of provenances of three spotted gum taxa on a range of sites in Queensland , 2004 .

[8]  E. Aitken,et al.  Susceptibility of provenances of spotted gums to Ramularia shoot blight , 2002 .

[9]  A. Alfenas,et al.  Sporothrix eucalypti a new pathogen of eucalyptus in Brazil. , 2001 .

[10]  J. Simpson Quambalaria, a new genus of eucalypt pathogens. , 2000 .

[11]  L. Bettucci,et al.  Endophytic mycobiota of healthy twigs and the assemblage of species associated with twig lesions of Eucalyptus globulus and E. grandis in Uruguay , 1999 .

[12]  C. Stone,et al.  Insect and fungal damage to young eucalypt trial plantings in northern New South Wales. , 1998 .

[13]  J. Walker,et al.  Ramularia on Eucalyptus and Angophora. , 1974 .

[14]  D. C. Blood,et al.  Diseases caused by fungi. , 1974 .

[15]  J. Walker,et al.  Shoot blight of Eucalyptus spp. caused by an undescribed species of Ramularia , 1971 .