Tomato Diseases - Fusarium and Verticillium Wilts Control
Download
Report
Transcript Tomato Diseases - Fusarium and Verticillium Wilts Control
Tomato Diseases
Fungal
Bacterial
Viral
Fruit Anthracnose - Colletotrichum spp.
Fusarium Wilt - Fusarium oxysporum
Verticillium Wilt - Verticillium dahliae, V. albo-atrum
Early Blight - Alternaria solani
Late Blight - Phytophthora infestans
Septoria Leaf Blight - Septoria lycopersici
Soil Rot of Fruit - Rhizoctonia
Bacterial Spot - Xanthomonas campestris pv. vesicatoria
Bacterial Speck - Pseudomonas syringae pv. tomato
Cucumber Mosaic Virus
Fusarium Wilt
Fusarium Wilt
Fusarium Wilt
Verticillium Wilt
Tomato Diseases - Fusarium and
Verticillium Wilts - Key Points
Pathogens: Fusarium oxysporum, Verticillium dahliae,
V. albo-atrum
Soil-borne pathogens
Survive in soil for several years
Plants generally infected through roots
Tomato Diseases - Fusarium and
Verticillium Wilts - Control Strategies
Rotation (at least 2-3 years)
VF or VFN resistance
Septoria Leaf Spot
Septoria Leaf Spot
Tomato Diseases - Septoria Leaf Blight
Key Points
Pathogen: Septoria lycopersici
Survives over winter on infected plant debris, and also on
equipment, stakes and cages
Spores dispersed by splashing water (rain, irrigation),
workers or equipment moving through wet plants
Favored by moist, warm weather
Symptoms generally appear first on lower leaves
Tomato Diseases - Septoria Leaf Blight
Control Strategies
Rotation (at least 1-2 years)
Thorough sanitation of equipment, stakes, etc.
Stake plants
Plastic mulches
Fungicide sprays
Several effective fungicides available
Apply at least weekly when weather favorable for
disease
Good coverage, especially of lower leaves, crucial
Carefully read label directions
Early Blight
Early Blight
Early Blight
Tomato Diseases - Early Blight
Key Points
Pathogen: Alternaria solani
Survives on infected plant debris - partially buried debris is
an excellent source of inoculum
Spores wind dispersed, can be carried long distances
Greatest threat of infection:
Fields with short rotations
Planting adjacent to fields infected previous year
where debris not completely buried
Infection occurs first on oldest leaves
Tomato Diseases - Early Blight
Control Strategies
Plant rotation - minimum of at least 2-3 years between
solanaceous crops
Potato, tomato, weeds in nightshade family
excellent hosts
Completely bury plant debris after harvest
Fungicide applications
Several effective fungicides available
Carefully read label directions
Provide adequate nitrogen
Avoid excessive irrigation
Late Blight
Late Blight
Tomato Diseases – Late Blight
Key Points
Pathogen:
Phytophthora infestans
Same fungus that causes late blight of potato
Isolates may differ in ability to infect potato and tomato
Both mating types (A1 and A2) are now found in WI
Symptoms:
Lesions on leaves initially water-soaked spots with irregular
borders
Lesions turn pale green, then brown to almost black
White fungal growth appears on underside of leaves at border
between necrotic and healthy tissue
Petiole and stem symptoms similar – lead to rapid death of plant
Tomato Diseases – Late Blight
Key Points
Source of inoculum:
Cull piles of infected potatoes or tomatoes
Infected tomato transplants
Infected plants in neighboring fields
Hairy nightshade
Favored by rain, high relative humidity
Control Strategies
Destroy cull piles, and weed hosts
Plant disease-free tomato transplants
Protectant fungicides – several effective fungicides available
Fruit Anthracnose
Fruit Anthracnose
Tomato Diseases - Fruit Anthracnose
Key Points
Pathogen: Several species including Colletotrichum
coccodes, C. dematium and C. gloeosporioides
Favored by wet weather and warm temperatures
Survives in soil and plant debris several years
Spores splashed by rain or irrigation onto foliage and
fruit
Ripe or overripe fruit most susceptible, symptoms
progress rapidly
Tomato Diseases - Fruit Anthracnose
Control Strategies
Rotation (at least 2 years)
Weed control (eliminates alternate hosts)
Stake plants
Mulches
Optimum plant spacing
Remove and destroy infected fruit
Fungicide sprays
Tomato Diseases - Fruit Anthracnose
Control Strategies
Fungicide sprays
Several effective fungicides available
Start when first fruit reaches size of a quarter
Continue weekly until harvest
Read labels carefully
Examples of label requirements:
rate of application
seasonal use limitations - amount / acre / season
pre-harvest intervals
crops that can be grown in treated area next year
Bacterial Spot
Bacterial Spot
Bacterial Speck
Bacterial Speck
Tomato Diseases - Bacterial Spot and Speck
Key Points
Pathogens:
Bacterial speck: Pseudomonas syringae pv. tomato
Bacterial spot: Xanthomonas campestris pv. vesicatoria
Favored by high humidity, rainfall/irrigation
Pathogens seed borne
Dispersal - wind driven rain, clipping plants, equipment
moving between wet plants
Optimum temperature:
Bacterial speck: 65-75° F
Bacterial Spot: 75-85° F
Tomato Diseases - Bacterial Spot and Speck
Control Strategies
Clean transplants, pathogen-free seed
Plant rotation - at least 1-2 years between solanaceous crops
Thoroughly incorporate plant debris after harvest
Application of bactericides
Fixed coppers - alone or in combination with fungicides
Heavy rain, wind-driven rain, hail decrease efficacy
Buckeye Rot
Soil Rot
Tomato Diseases - Soil Rot of Fruit
Key Points
Pathogen: Rhizoctonia solani
Symptoms:
Rotted tissue showing concentric bands of alternating dark
and light brown
Initially, rotted area is firm but becomes mushy with invasion
of soft rotting organisms
Affected areas eventually turn black
Overwinters in soil
Fungus enters tomato where fruit contacts soil
Symptoms may not be evident at harvest but can develop in storage or
shipment
Tomato Diseases - Soil Rot of Fruit
Control Strategies
mulching around base of plants to avoid fruit contact
with soil helps prevent infection
mulches include straw, grass clippings, paper,
plastic
staking or caging of plants helps to avoid fruit contact
with soil
Tobacco Mosaic Virus
Tomato Diseases – Tobacco Mosaic
Virus (TMV) - Key Points:
Pathogen: Tobacco Mosaic Virus
Symptoms:
Light and dark green mottled areas on leaves
Necrosis of fruit with some strains
Stunting of plants depending on growth stage at infection
Virus easily transmitted by workers, machinery
TMV may be present in tobacco products
Virus survives on equipment, in plant debris
Tomato Diseases – Tobacco Mosaic
Virus (TMV) - Control Strategies:
Crop rotation – minimum of 3 years
Workers should wash hands in detergent before handling
plants
Sanitize pruning equipment periodically
Use cultivars with TMV resistance
Cucumber Mosaic Virus
Tomato Diseases – Cucumber Mosaic
Virus (CMV) - Key Points:
Pathogen: Cucumber Mosaic Virus
Symptoms - foliar:
Mosaic or mottle similar to symptoms produced by TMV
“Shoestring” appearance of leaves (filiform or threadlike)
General stunting of the plant
Symptoms – fruit:
Yield reduction – amount and size of fruit
Fruit often misshapen
Delay in maturity
Numerous strains of the virus exist – many are specific to tomato
Over 700 plant species are host to this virus
Usually spread by aphids
Tomato Diseases – Cucumber Mosaic
Virus (CMV) - Control Strategies:
Eliminate weed hosts – such as
Milkweed
Chickweed
Ragweed
Clover
White cockle
Carpet weed
Plant a non-host barrier (such as corn) around the tomato
crop
Double Streak Virus
Double Streak Virus
Blossom End Rot
Catface
Growth Cracks
2,4-D Injury
Juglone Toxicity
Juglone Toxicity