Peanut smut in Argentina: an analysis of the disease, advances and challenges

Plant Dis. 2024 Apr 14. doi: 10.1094/PDIS-03-24-0521-FE. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Peanut (Arachis hypogaea L.) is a globally high-value food crop, with Argentina ranking the third position in global peanut exports. However, Argentine peanut production faces a severe threat from a fungal disease: peanut smut caused by Thecaphora frezzii. This disease is particularly prevalent in Córdoba Province, where recent surveys have documented a gradual increase in prevalence and incidence of peanut smut, becoming a significant challenge to peanut production. First identified in Brazil in the 1960s in wild peanut and later in Argentina in 1995 in commercial peanut field, the disease has rapidly spread due to distinctive pathogen characteristics, including lack of visible symptoms on aerial plant parts, spore spread and survival, and a lack of proactive efforts to develop and apply management strategies. This results in gradually accumulating teliospores of T. frezzii in soil, further intensifying the problem in subsequent growing seasons, increasing the intensity of the disease and resulting in reduced yield and quality. This review summarizes recent research on peanut smut, focusing on disease assessment, molecular characterization, diagnosis and detection, epidemiology, host range and environmental conditions, and the latest advancements in management approaches, including fungicide spraying, breeding programs, cultural management and biological control, aimed to enhance understanding and support effective disease management strategies in peanut production systems.

Keywords: Disease management; Fungi < Thecaphora frezzii; Peanut disease; Subject Areas.