A mushroom widely distributed in Asia, Southeast Asia and Oceania, it is now observed in all the taro production zones of the inter-tropical belt.
Dénomination anglo-saxone : Brown leaf spot or ghost leaf spot
Leaf-only disease.
Mainly present on water taro ( Colocasia esculenta ), more rarely on taro of the genus Alocassia , it does not seem to affect taro of the genus Xanthosoma .
Susceptible botanical family(s)
Araceae
Production areas affected :
Guyana
New Caledonia
Organs attacked
Leaves
Symptoms
Symptoms :
Olive green (fig. 1 and 2) to orange-brown (fig. 3) spots, with a rather diffuse outline, developing on the lower leaves. Circular to irregular, measuring 5 to 15 mm in diameter, they affect the inter-vein tissues of the limbus and converge in places ((fig. 4). Their center is downy at first, becomes necrotic and then takes on a grayish tint.
Fairly characteristic orange-brown color of the spots observed on the underside of the leaves.
Attacks mostly occur on older leaves, but during severe attacks young mature leaves may show symptoms of the disease.
Only the leaves are affected
Round, olive green spots, quite numerous on the upper side of the leaf.
The spots are orange-brown on the underside of the leaf blade.
They are less numerous because all the spots do not necessarily cross the leaf blade (fig. 6, 7 and 8).
Signs : septate brown conidiophores bearing lighter conidia are visible with a binocular magnifying glass but more easily with a light microscope (fig. 9 and 10). The conidia are few in number and of various shapes, unicellular or presenting up to 3 partitions, isolated or in short chains, sometimes branched (fig. 11).
Possible confusion : Neojohnstonia colocasiae (taro orange spot disease)