 
          © Benaki Phytopathological Institute
        
        
          Eslami
        
        
          et al.
        
        
          2
        
        
          ease incidence is high (Kolte, 1984; Le, 2004;
        
        
          Nguyen, 2004).
        
        
          Sclerotium rolfsii
        
        
          overwinters as myceli-
        
        
          um or sclerotia in infected plant tissues and
        
        
          soil. Under favorable conditions, hyphae or
        
        
          germinating sclerotia infect the plant and
        
        
          subsequently colonize and invade the root
        
        
          and stem tissue with typical silky white my-
        
        
          celium (Brewster, 2001). Infected plants be-
        
        
          come yellow and then wilt, the collar root
        
        
          turns brown and rots. In groundnut,
        
        
          S. rolf-
        
        
          sii
        
        
          also infects the pegs and pods, leading to
        
        
          yield losses.
        
        
          Sclerotium rolfsii
        
        
          is difficult to control by
        
        
          physical and cultural practices due to its
        
        
          wide host range of over 500 plant species
        
        
          (Aycock, 1966; Punja, 1985) and persistent
        
        
          sclerotia (Lakpale, 2007; Punja, 1985). To suc-
        
        
          cessfully implement management practices
        
        
          (e.g., chemical and biological) to control
        
        
          S.
        
        
          rolfsii
        
        
          , knowledge of the distribution and di-
        
        
          versity especially in pathogenicity and viru-
        
        
          lence of the pathogen is essential.
        
        
          Branch and Brenneman (1999) evaluat-
        
        
          ed the resistance of mass-selected popula-
        
        
          tions derived from combinations of cross-
        
        
          es among two resistant and two susceptible
        
        
          peanut cultivars. Fery and Dukes sr. (2002)
        
        
          determined the cowpea resistance to
        
        
          S. rolf-
        
        
          sii
        
        
          . There was significant variability in cow-
        
        
          pea germplasm for resistance to southern
        
        
          blight. In another study (Flores-Moctezuma
        
        
          et al
        
        
          ., 2006), two onion isolates of
        
        
          S. rolfsii
        
        
          were inoculated to 51 plant species and dis-
        
        
          ease severity levels were determined. Sub-
        
        
          sequently, 12 out of 51 plant species were
        
        
          selected for the determination of pathogen-
        
        
          ic reaction to 20 isolates of
        
        
          S. rolfsii
        
        
          from dif-
        
        
          ferent regions. Onion isolates produced vari-
        
        
          able levels of disease severity for half of the
        
        
          plants tested. Five plant species were sus-
        
        
          ceptible or highly susceptible to all isolates.
        
        
          Eleven sugar beet genotypes were eval-
        
        
          uated at National Agricultural Research Cen-
        
        
          ter, Islamabad, Pakistan, during the year 2009
        
        
          for their resistance against root rot caused
        
        
          by
        
        
          S. rolfsii
        
        
          (Farooq
        
        
          et al
        
        
          ., 2011). Inoculation
        
        
          of eleven genotypes with
        
        
          S. rolfsii
        
        
          exhibited
        
        
          resistant response only in SD-PAK-09/07 and
        
        
          moderate resistance in SD-PAK-07/071.
        
        
          The results of a recent study showed that
        
        
          S. rolfsii
        
        
          isolates originating from ground-
        
        
          nut, tomato and taro were all pathogen-
        
        
          ic on groundnut, but displayed substantial
        
        
          diversity of various genetic and phenotyp-
        
        
          ic traits, including mycelial compatibility,
        
        
          growth rate, and sclerotial characteristics
        
        
          (Le
        
        
          et al
        
        
          ., 2012).
        
        
          The aim of this study was to identify the
        
        
          virulence of different
        
        
          S. rolfsii
        
        
          isolates on a
        
        
          susceptible local peanut germplasm and
        
        
          determine the resistance of twenty peanut
        
        
          genotypes to the most virulent isolate and
        
        
          also the relationship between virulence and
        
        
          mycelial compatibility groups (MCGs).
        
        
          
            Materials and Methods
          
        
        
          
            Isolates virulence determination
          
        
        
          Seventy eight isolates of
        
        
          S. rolfsii
        
        
          from ten
        
        
          different hosts in Guilan province with known
        
        
          MCGs (Mehri
        
        
          et al
        
        
          ., 2013) were applied for in-
        
        
          oculation of a local susceptible peanut germ-
        
        
          plasm in greenhouse conditions (Table 1).
        
        
          Barley seeds were boiled in distilled wa-
        
        
          ter for twenty minutes and then 12 gr of
        
        
          seeds were added to each 100 ml Erlenmey-
        
        
          er flask and autoclaved twice at 121
        
        
          o
        
        
          C and 1.5
        
        
          atmospheres for thirty minutes. For each iso-
        
        
          late a 5 mm disk of growing fungus on PDA
        
        
          medium was transferred to the Erlenmeyer
        
        
          flask containing sterilized barley seeds and
        
        
          the cultures were maintained in the growth
        
        
          chamber (27±1
        
        
          o
        
        
          C) (Sennoi
        
        
          et al
        
        
          ., 2010).
        
        
          The applied soil (1:1:2 clay, compost, sand,
        
        
          pH=6.7) was autoclaved at 121
        
        
          o
        
        
          C and 1.5 at-
        
        
          mospheres for thirty minutes and added to
        
        
          the pots with 500 gr soil capacity. Seeds of
        
        
          a local susceptible peanut germplasm were
        
        
          sterilized with Sodium Hypochlorite 1% so-
        
        
          lution for three minutes and rinsed with
        
        
          sterilized distilled water three times, then
        
        
          soaked in sterilized distilled water. The pea-
        
        
          nut seeds were placed in a moist chamber at
        
        
          25±5
        
        
          o
        
        
          C for 72 h to germinate.
        
        
          When the mycelium covered all the bar-
        
        
          ley seeds and enough sclerotia were formed,
        
        
          each pot was inoculated with thirty infect-
        
        
          ed barley seeds and the seeds were covered