Twenty-three Monilinia isolates of various origin were identified and compared by morphological means
and by biomolecular protocols based on random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) analysis, and on PCR detection
by species-specific primer pairs. The identification of most Monilinia isolates by PCR and RAPD confirmed the
identification by morphological criteria, although two isolates initially identified as M. fructigena by morphological
means were attributed to M. fructicola by the biomolecular techniques. Monilinia isolates were also compared in
terms of their in vitro pectolytic activity and isoenzyme patterns. All the isolates produced polygalacturonase and
pectin methylesterase, but pectin lyase activity was found only in M. fructicola and M. fructigena, and not in most M.
laxa isolates. The Monilinia isolates differed significantly in their isoenzyme patterns. Based on RAPD-PCR and
PCR amplification and pectolytic isoenzymes, the isolates analysed clustered in three major groups, each corresponding
to a Monilinia species. Artificial inoculations in peach and pear fruits revealed differences in virulence between
the Monilinia species and within isolates. No correlation was found between the amount of pectolytic enzymes produced
in vitro and virulence. Variations between and within the Monilinia species may depend at the physiological
level on variations in the isoenzyme patterns of the pectolytic enzymes