The first USA continental record of coffee leaf rust (Hemileia vastatrix) on coffee (Coffea arabica) in southwest Florida, USA

Plant Dis. 2023 Sep 29. doi: 10.1094/PDIS-09-23-1869-PDN. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Coffee leaf rust (CLR), caused by Hemileia vastatrix Berk. & Broome (Zaghouaniaceae) is considered the most significant fungal disease of Coffea arabica L. (Rubiaceae), from which berries are harvested and processed to obtain coffee beverage (Talhinhas et al. 2017). In Florida, coffee plants are mainly used as ornamentals due to their fragrant flowers; however, there are ongoing field trials evaluating the adaptability of plants for coffee production to climate conditions in the state (Crane et al. 2005). In November 2021, young seedlings of C. arabica var. caturra from a residence in Naples (Collier County) in southwest Florida were discovered with signs of rust fungus. Minute, yellow, suprastomatal sori 53-81 µm in diam were formed on the abaxial leaf surface, forming blotches. Light-yellow urediniospores measured 29-31 × 20-29 µm, with a reniform or "hunchbacked" shape, had thick walls measuring 1.5-2.5 µm in height, and were dorsally echinulate, the individual spikes measuring 2.5-3.3 µm in height. Spikes were scattered over most of the dorsal surface and form a dense ridge separating the dorsal from the smooth ventral side. (e-Xtra Fig. 1). Symptoms and signs are consistent with published descriptions of CLR produced by H. vastatrix (Ritschel 2005). To confirm the identification, DNA sequencing of the large subunit (LSU) of the ribosomal repeat was done following the protocols of Aime (2006) (GenBank accession number OR296753-OR296754). The Florida specimen shares 100% sequence identity (887/728 bp) with other accessions of H. vastatrix in congruence with maximum likelihood phylogenetic analysis performed in RAxMLv8.0.0 (Stamatakis 2014) (e-Xtra Fig. 2). In addition to CLR, Hemileia coffeicola Maubl. & Roger, causal agent of powdery rust of coffee, produces similar leaf spots on coffee but has a restricted geographical distribution. This agent is found only above 500 m a.s.l. in central Africa (Silva et al. 2006) and produces larger urediniospores (34-40 × 20-28 µm) (Maublanc & Roger 1934) in sori are scattered in abaxial leaf surface giving a powdery appearance. Hemileia vastatrix has been reported from almost every major coffee growing country of the world as well as Hawaii and Puerto Rico (Keith et al. 2022, Ramirez-Camejo et al., 2022). This is the first report of CLR in the continental USA, however, CLR poses a limited threat to the USA agriculture in view of the fact coffee is not commercially grown within the continental USA. A voucher was made of dried symptomatic leaves and deposited at Plant Industry Gainesville Herbarium (PIHG 15712, 16332) and the Arthur Fungarium at Purdue University (PUR N23473). The remaining infested coffee seedlings were destroyed after phytopathological diagnosis, and the pathogen has been absent from all additional screenings since November 2021.

Keywords: Causal Agent; Crop Type; Field crops; Fungi; Ornamentals.