Sampling and detection strategies for the pine pitch canker (PPC) disease pathogen Fusarium circinatum in Europe
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Date
Authors
Vainio, Eeva J.
Bezos, Diana
Bragança, Helena
Cleary, Michelle
Gerda Fourie
Georgieva, Margarita
Ghelardini, Luisa
Hannunen, Salla
Ioos, Renaud
Martín-García, Jorge
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
MDPI Publishing
Abstract
Fusarium circinatum Nirenberg & O’Donnel is listed among the species recommended for
regulation as quarantine pests in Europe. Over 60 Pinus species are susceptible to the pathogen and
it also causes disease on Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii (Mirb.) Franco) and species in genera
such as Picea and Larix. The European Food Safety Authority considers the probability of new
introductions—via contaminated seeds, wood material, soil and growing substrates, natural means
and human activities—into the EU very likely. Due to early detection, constant surveillance and
control measures, F. circinatum outbreaks have o cially been eradicated in Italy and France. However,
the global spread of F. circinatum suggests that the pathogen will continue to be encountered in new
environments in the future. Therefore, continuous surveillance of reproductive material, nurseries
and plantations, prompt control measures and realistic contingency plans will be important in Europe
and elsewhere to limit disease spread and the “bridgehead e ect”, where new introductions of a tree pathogen become increasingly likely as new environments are invaded, must be considered.
Therefore, survey programs already implemented to limit the spread in Europe and that could
be helpful for other EU countries are summarized in this review. These surveys include not only
countries where pitch canker is present, such as Portugal and Spain, but also several other EU
countries where F. circinatum is not present. Sampling protocols for seeds, seedlings, twigs, branches,
shoots, soil samples, spore traps and insects from di erent studies are collated and compiled in this
review. Likewise, methodology for morphological and molecular identification is herein presented.
These include conventional PCR with a target-specific region located in the intergenic spacer region,
as well as several real-time PCR protocols, with di erent levels of specificity and sensitivity. Finally,
the global situation and future perspectives are addressed.
Description
Keywords
Gibberella circinata, Quarantine species, Damping-o, Survey programs, Morphological identification, Molecular detection
Sustainable Development Goals
Citation
Vainio, E.J., Bezos, D., Bragança, H. et al. 2019, 'Sampling and detection strategies for the pine pitch
canker (PPC) disease pathogen Fusarium circinatum
in Europe', Forests, vol. 10, no. 9, art. 723, pp. 1-27.