Pest/Pathogen of the Month: January
Scientific name: Pewenomyces kutranfy
Pewenomyces kutranfy is a recently-discovered fungal pathogen with the ability to girdle branches and trunks of the symbolic Araucaria araucana in Chile. This tree is of sacred importance to the indigenous Mapuche people in Chile, and from whose language, Mapudungun, the pathogen’s name was derived: Pewen being the name for A. araucaria, and kutran, meaning disease.
Pewenomyces is a monotypic genus inside the Coryneliaceae. This family contains other emergent canker pathogens including Caliciopsis pinea and C. Moriondi on Pinus species in North America and Europe respectively, and Hypsotheca pleomorpha on Eucalyptus spp. in Australia. Although Pewenomyces resembles these species morphologically, it is distinctly adapted to cold temperatures and, so far, has only been recorded from A. araucana. Research is still needed to disclose the rest of the story regarding P. kutranfy, although, the current hypothesis points to a native pathogen causing uncharacteristic disease epidemics as a result of climate change.
Click here to read the journal article.