POST HARVEST DISEASES OF CARROT - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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POST HARVEST DISEASES OF CARROT

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POST HARVEST DISEASES OF CARROT Post harvest diseases of carrot Sour rot - Geotrichum candidum Crown rot - Rhizoctonia solani Cottony soft rot - Sclerotinia ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: POST HARVEST DISEASES OF CARROT


1
POST HARVEST DISEASES OF CARROT
2
Post harvest diseases of carrot
  • Sour rot - Geotrichum candidum
  • Crown rot - Rhizoctonia solani
  • Cottony soft rot - Sclerotinia sclerotiarum
  • Phytophthora root rot - Phytophthora megasperma
  • Black rot - Alternaria radicina
  • Root dieback - Pythium debaryanum
  • Bacterial soft rot - Erwinia carotovora sub sp.
    caotovora

3
Crown rot - Rhizoctonia solani
  • Damping-off of carrot seedlings and a crown rot
    later and during storage
  • Field symptoms include premature senescence and
    death of foliage
  • On carrot roots - dark brown sunken lesions or
    cankers near the crown or in other parts of the
    root cavity spot

4
  • Fungus
  • Sclerotia - irregular, brown to black and 5mm in
    dia
  • Fungus produces both terminal and intercalary,
    barrel shaped chlamydospore

Hyphae of Rhizoctonia solani with right-angled
branching pattern
5
  • Mode of spread and survival
  • R. solani overwinters in soils as mycelia on
    plant debris and as dark brown sclerotia that
    remain in soil for long periods
  • R. solani can spread from plant to plant in
    closely spaced carrots when the canopy is fully
    formed
  • Epidemiology
  • More severe on muck-grown carrots
  • Warm temperatures and wet conditions - especially
    when these environmental conditions occur near
    harvest

6
  • Control
  • Cultural practices that reduce crown injury and
    enhance soil drainage and air circulation within
    the canopy are recommended
  • Plant debris from previous crops should be
    removed before planting carrots
  • Carrots should not follow perennial crops such as
    alfalfa
  • Quintozene sprayed in the soil before
    sowing-effective control

7
Cottony soft rot / white mould - Sclerotinia
sclerotiarum
  • Foliage - water soaked, dark olive-green lesions
    associated with collapsed tissues
  • Lesions expand rapidly over the entire leaf,
    petiole, and rosette with infected tissues
  • Covered by abundant cottony, white mycelium

8
Lesions of sclerotinia rot advancing on carrot
petioles and the rosette
Collapsed leaves and petioles
9
  • At an advanced stage - affected tissues exhibit a
    bleached appearance, and occasionally an entire
    plant may collapse
  • Large black sclerotia (2 to 20mm) form externally
    embedded in the mycelium or internally, within
    the pith of the petiole

10
  • Source of inoculum - soil - sclerotia, mycelium
    or ascospores of fungus occur
  • Temp - 12.9 to 18.5oC
  • Control
  • Storage - Good ventilation
  • Use of clean containers, maintenance of temp near
    0oC and RH - 95

11
Phytophthora root rot or rubbery brown
rotPhytophthora megasperma
  • Infected portions of the root become dark brown
    to black, water-soaked and rubbery in consistency
  • Lesions may occur in one or more bands anywhere
    on the carrot root
  • White mycelia may be present on lesions, which
    facilitates the spread of the fungus to adjacent
    roots

12
  • Epidemiology
  • Relatively wet soil conditions from excessive
    rain/irrigation and temperatures between 70 to
    75ºF
  • Mode of spread and survival
  • Soil borne
  • Produces zoospores (swimming spores) - easily
    spread through water
  • Management
  • Maintaining adequate soil drainage
  • Avoid prolonged periods of water saturation
  • Storage conditions - temperature at 32º F and RH
    lt95

13
Black rot Alternaria radicina
  • Seedling infection results in pre emergence and
    post emergence damping-off
  • Older senescing petioles on mature plants are
    particularly susceptible to infection
  • Provide an avenue for infection of the carrot
    crown, which appears as a black ring of decay
    where the petioles attach to the root (black
    crown)
  • Stored carrots - dry, black, sunken lesions
    which can decay the entire root and spread to
    adjacent carrots

14
  • Mode of spread and survival
  • Seed borne
  • Survive in crop debris or in soil for up to eight
    years as spores spread via water and wind
  • Infects carrots at any stage of growth during
    periods of warm temperatures (greater than 68ºF)
    and extended leaf wetness
  • Management
  • Cholorothalonil Seed and soil application
  • Fungicides - Iprodione and Strobilurins
  • gt 8 years rotation with non host crop
  • Maintaining proper temperature and humidity (32ºF
    and 95 RH) in storage
  • Bacillus subtilis T. viride application

15
Root dieback Pythium debaryanum, P.
aphanidermatum
  • Pythium brown rot and forking
  • Root dieback of carrots produces excessively
    branched or stubbed roots
  • Fungus kills young tap roots after seed
    germination, reducing root length and/or
    stimulating forking
  • Forking and stubbing occur, but these symptoms
    can also be caused by soil compaction, nematodes

16
  • Mode of spread and survival
  • Produce sporangia and oospores
  • Spores and mycelia are responsible for the spread
    of the fungus in the field, which is facilitated
    by wet soil conditions
  • Control
  • Avoiding excessive watering
  • By providing good field drainage
  • Planting carrots in deep, friable and well
    drained soils
  • Post emergence fungicides - Mefenoxam - to
    control damping-off

17
Bacterial soft rot (Erwinia carotovora sub sp.
caotovora)
  • Cells become water soaked, middle lamella is
    destroyed and the cells collapse
  • Soft, watery or slimy consistency
  • Rotted tissues grey to brown, accompanied by
    foul odour
  • In the field, tops of rotted carrots turn yellow
    and wilt as roots break down

18
  • Bacteria
  • Gram ve, motile with large peritrichous flagella
  • Mode of survival and spread
  • Soil - source of primary inoculum
  • Survive in decaying refuse and enter the root
    principally through cultivation wounds, harvest
    bruises, freezing injury, and insect openings
  • Flies Hylemus cillicrura, H. brassicae carry
    the bacteria in their intestinal tracts
  • Control
  • Careful handling at harvest - minimizes bruising
    of carrot roots
  • Washing - dipping in a solution of sodium
    hypochlorite (5.25)
  • Storage condition - temp- just above
    freezing(0oC), RH 90
  • Crop rotation - alfalfa, beans, beets, corn

19
Sour rot - Geotrichum candidum
  • Soft, watery, colorless decay on carrot roots
  • Decayed area - covered with dull, white spores of
    the pathogen and a vinegar-like odour may develop
  • Fungus - soil inhabitant that infects carrots
    through wounds
  • In storage warm temp (greater than 32F) and
    improperly ventilated

20
  • Fungus
  • G. candidum - grows as a series of filamentous
    cells called hyphae
  • Its spores, called conidia or arthrospores, are
    produced by fragmentation of the hyphae
  • Hyphae and spores are white and appear colorless

21
  • Control
  • In the field
  • good field drainage
  • minimizing wounding of carrots
  • In storage
  • good sanitation (use of new or disinfected
    storage containers)
  • precooling and storing carrots at 32º F is
    essential

22
Crater rot- Rhizoctonia carotae
  • Symptoms
  • Band of dark brown necrosis around the crown and
    horizontal brown canker-like lesions mostly on
    the crown and upper roots
  • Small pits subsequently developed beneath the
    lesions, that enlarged into sunken brown crater
    lines with a white, flocculent mycelium produced
    under high humidity

Typical crater rot caused by R. caratoe on carrot
roots. Note dark brown decay (arrows) around the
crown and upper parts of the root.
23
  • Bitterness
  • Carrots can develop off-flavours or bitterness in
    cool storage. The cause of these off-flavours is
    the production of compounds in carrots called
    isocoumarins. Isocoumarins develop when carrots
    are exposed to ethylene.
  • Ethylene is a gas produced naturally by many
    fruits and vegetables, such as apples, bananas
    and tomatoes during ripening.
  • Carrots can be stored in sealed plastic bags in
    domestic refrigerators containing ethylene
    producing fruit.
  • Phenolic browning
  • Phenolic browning (or surface browning) is seen
    as a browning or discoloration of the surface of
    carrot.
  • It can develop when carrots are washed and stored
    in cool     rooms for long periods before
    packing.
  •  Abrasion caused by mechanical washing often
    removes the epidermal layer (outer skin),
    exposing the carrot tissue to oxidation of
    phenolic compounds, which turn brown, or black in
    severe cases.
  • Phenolic browning can be confused with 5 oclock
    shadow or boron deficiency of carrots.
  • The latter is seen as many small brown spots
    under the skin, causing the root to look dull.

24
  • Management
  • Rapid removal of field heat.
  • Application of  Dowicide (Ophenylphenol) _at_ 98
    g/L.
  • 6 methoxy mellen increase resistance
  • Cholorothalonil Seed and soil application.
  • 8 years rotation with non host crop.
  • Using disease free seed.
  • Bacillus subtilis  T.viride application.
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