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Stripe rust, Puccinia striiformis Westend. f. sp. tritici, is one of the most important diseases of wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) that can be found around the world. In Canada, stripe rust was first discovered on a wild grass in Alberta, in 1918, and few years later on barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) and on wheat (Newton and Johnson 1936). Since that time, the disease has been observed mostly in the Prairies and in British Columbia. Stripe rust can cause between 10% and 70% yield loss, depending on factors such as cultivar susceptibility and timing of infection initiation (Baily et al. 2003; Chen 2005). Since 2000, the disease has also been reported in Ontario but yield has not been affected (OMAFRA 2009). In Ontario, stripe rust occurrence appears to be associated with early spring conditions or a prolonged cool period (between 10°C and 15°C with increased leaf wetness) (Chen 2005). An alternate host for the pathogen was not known until Jin et al. (2010) demonstrated that wheat inoculated with aeciospores collected from Berberis chinensis Poir. resulted in the formation of uredinia. Later, Wang and Chen (2013) reported that Oregon grape (Mahonia aquifolium (Pursh) Nutt.) also was an alternate host. These discoveries indicate that the pathogen inoculum could be aeciospores coming from local alternate hosts along with urediniospores carried by air currents from the southern United States, where the pathogen overwinters on native grasses and winter wheat (Bailey et al. 2003).

On 26 July 2013, stripe rust was found on the upper leaves of six wheat lines and three cultivars grown in experimental performance trials at the Université Laval research station in Saint-Augustin-de-Desmaures (46°43'56.6''N, 71°31'04.6''W, QC, Canada). To our knowledge, this is the first report of P. striiformis f. sp. tritici in the province of Quebec. Several dried infected leaves have been deposited in the National Mycological Herbarium (maintained by Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada in Ottawa) with accession number DAOM 243003. Uredinia occurred on the upper leaf surfaces only. None were observed on the leaf sheath. These sori were yellow and arranged in narrow stripes lined up along the length of leaf blades. The stripes were 3-12 mm long and spaced 0-5 mm apart. The number of stripes on a leaf was low, ranging from 4 to 20. Pustules were elongated to oval, measuring 0.31-0.58 x 0.13-0.19 mm. Urediniospores were egg-shaped to spherical, yellow, and measured 25-30 x 20-28 μm. DNA was extracted from urediniospores and amplified by PCR or real-time PCR (qPCR) using several sets of specific primers: Pst1 and Pst2 (Wang et al. 2008), Nesta (Wang et al. 2009), and two qPCR assays (Liu et al. in press) targeting short fragments within the RPB2 and BT gene regions analyzed by Liu and Hambleton (2010, 2013). Relative to the phylogeny published by Liu and Hambleton (2010), the BT fragment is diagnostic for Puccinia Series Striiformis, comprising four species of which three were formerly included in the broadly-defined P. striiformis species complex, while the RPB2 fragment is specific for P. striiformis sensu stricto. The sequences underlying the BT assay differentiate the four species (P. striiformis, P. striiformoides, P. pseudostriiformis and P. gansensis) in pairwise comparisons at up to four nucleotide positions. The qPCR positive reactions were direct-sequenced for additional validation. A sequence for the internal transcribed spacer region 2 and partial 28S ribosomal RNA gene was also determined using the primers Rust2inv (Aime 2006) and ITS4Ru1 (5'- GCCTTAGATGGAATTTACCACCC-3'). All results were consistent with the morphometric identification of P. striiformis f. sp. tritici. The sequences were deposited in GenBank as KM679359 (ITS2/28S, 541 bp), KM105961 (BT, 136 bp) and KM105962 (RPB2, 306 bp). The BT and RPB2 data were a 100% match to three and two sequences of wheat stripe rust, respectively, found in the NCBI nr database (July 2014).

As sporulation generally starts 12 to 14 days after infection (Chen et al. 2014), infections could have occurred around 11-14 July 2013. Indeed, on 12-13 July, the minimum temperatures recorded at the closest Environment Canada station, the Quebec Jean-Lesage International Airport, were 11°C and 9°C, respectively; these correspond to optimal temperatures for infection (7-12°C according to Chen et al. 2014). Such temperatures also occurred on 1 July and 21-27 July 2013. However, average day temperatures between 1-24 July 2013, with the exception of 21 July, were higher than the optimal temperatures (10-15°C) reported for the latent period, from the infection to the sporulation (Chen et al. 2014). It is possible that we are in the presence of high temperature strains that emerged a few years ago in southeastern United States (Markell and Milus 2008). This means that stripe rust could occur again in Quebec and thus deserves to be followed more closely, especially as two Berberis species, B. thunbergii DC. and B. vulgaris L., were reported in this region (Romain Néron, Herbier du Québec, pers. comm.). The presence of alternate hosts raises the concern of early-season infection, which could potentially lead to higher yield losses and the possible occurrence of new virulence phenotypes since the pathogen can complete its sexual cycle.