Four Neofabraea species are responsible for bull's eye rot, which is an important postharvest disease of apples and pears. The species diversity of its causal agents in Europe has not been thoroughly explored using molecular genetic methods.
Eighty-one Neofabraea isolates were obtained mostly from apples with bull's eye rot symptoms in the Czech Republic over a two year period. The isolates were identified using PCR fingerprinting and DNA sequencing of the ITS rDNA region, the mitochondrial SSU rDNA and the beta-tubulin and EF1 alpha genes.
The most common species was N. alba (89 %), followed by N. perennans (5 %) and N. kienholzii (5 %). This is the third published record of N. kienholzii in Europe.
The species identity of the isolate CPPF507, which was placed close to N. kienholzii, remains unclear. EF1 alpha was shown to be a suitable marker for the identification of species of the genus Neofabraea and was comparable to the previously used beta-tubulin gene.
Furthermore, the aggressiveness of individual species was compared and species distribution across Europe was summarized. N. perennans and isolate CPPF507 proved to be the most aggressive, whereas the least aggressive was N. kienholzii.
Two N. alba isolates isolated from symptomless apple fruits and leaves were pathogenic to apples in the infection tests.