It was originally found on the living stems of Solanum tuberosum in New York, USA.[2]
Fusarium acuminatum has been found to be a ripe rot pathogen of Actinidia deliciosa (fuzzy kiwifruit) in New Zealand.[3]
It has been found to cause post-harvest Rot on stored Kiwifruit (Actinidia arguta) in China. It was described as soft, brown, slightly sunken, water-soaked lesions with abundant white-to-pink mycelium.[4] It also causes root rot of Maidong (Ophiopogon japonicus) in China.[5]Fusarium acuminatum and Fusarium solani are known to be major pathogens causing root rot of Astragalus membranaceus (Mongolian milkvetch), which can lead to serious yield loss of the herb in China.[6]
^Pennycook, S.R.; Samuels, G.J. (1985). "Botryosphaeria and Fusicoccum species associated with ripe fruit rot of Actinidia deliciosa (kiwifruit) in New Zealand". Mycotaxon. 24: 445–458.
^Wang, C.W.; Ai, J.; Fan, S.T.; Lv, H.Y.; Qin, H.Y.; Yang, Y.M.; Liu, Y.X. (November 2015). "Fusarium acuminatum: A New Pathogen Causing Postharvest Rot on Stored Kiwifruit in China". Plant Disease. 99 (11): 1644. doi:10.1094/PDIS-01-15-0021-PDN. ISSN 0191-2917.
Fusariumacuminatum is a fungal plant pathogen. It was originally found on the living stems of Solanum tuberosum in New York, USA. Fusarium acuminatum...
few commercially significant pests of this plant. Fungal pathogen Fusariumacuminatum has been found to be a ripe rot pathogen of Actinidia deliciosa in...
oxysporum F. culmorum Less common spp. include: F. acuminatum F. equiseti F. crookwellense Fusarium wilt Fusarium spp. F. avenaceum F. oxysporum F. solani f....
described as causing the sickness in sea buckthorn: the genus Fusarium (Fusarium wilt): F. acuminatum, F. camptoceras and F. oxysporum, as well as F. rhizoctonia...
PMID 37042758. Zhong, Zhi-Juan Zhong; et al. (2023). "Acuminatums E and F, two new cyclic lipopeptides from Fusarium lateritium HU0053 and their antifungal activity"...