Title: Diseases Covered
1Diseases Covered
- Rhizoctonia Crown Rot and Blight
- Botrytis Blight
- Black Spot
- Daylily Rust
2Rhizoctonia crown and root rot.
- Caused by Rhizoctonia solani
- Root rot may develop either in the rooting cube
or on rooted cuttings transplanted to pots as the
crop is finished for retail. Infected roots
become water-soaked then brown. - Both root tips and sections of the root away from
the tip may develop symptoms. Crown rot can
develop on the stem as lesions expand from stem
infections occurring during propagation.
3Rhizoctonia crown and root rot.
- Stem lesions may develop at a much slower pace on
rooted plants, since this tissue is more hardened
off and thus more resistant than stems of newly
made cuttings. - Foliar symptoms of crown and root rot include
chlorosis, leaf necrosis, wilting, defoliation,
and plant death, but often the most common
symptom is stunting. - Root rot infections may be initiated from lesions
on stems or from inoculum introduced to the
potting mix from debris surviving in the
greenhouse.
4Rhizoctonia crown and root rot.
- Generally, moist but not wet conditions in the
potting mix favor development of Rhizoctonia
crown and root rot on potted plants. - Spacing plants with a full canopy too close
together can result in moisture and soil
temperatures favorable for development of disease
due to shading of the container surface.
5Rhizoctonia Damping off
6Rhizoctonia Crown Rot Poinsettia
7Rhizoctonia Blight Begonia
8Rhizoctonia blight Impatiens
9Control
- Control of stem and root rot begins with thorough
removal of all crop debris at the end of a
cropping cycle. - Sanitation of work area and bench surfaces with
surface disinfectants is important. - During propagation, misting cycles should be
monitored closely to avoid over wetting foliage. - In greenhouse production facilities with a
history of Rhizoctonia, soaking dry rooting
strips in a fungicide solution can protect
cuttings from disease - Generally one application of fungicide is
sufficient to protect the crop during the
propagation cycle. - After transplanting, fungicide drenches may be
needed at regular intervals to prevent crown and
root rot
10Botrytis Blight
- CAUSAL ORGANISM Botrytis cinerea
- Botrytis blight is common in all parts of the
world. This fungus is not a specific pathogen and
can take advantage of many situations to produce
a blight or rot condition on many hosts. - It is an opportunist on cut or pruned rose canes
and will infect flowers and buds.
11 12Symptoms/Signs
- The most common symptoms usually are seen on
young flower buds which droop, turn black at the
base and later produce the cottony grey-black
mycelium of the fungus. - Flowers can also be affected in the same way and
cut ends will have the black canker like symptoms
with presence of mycelium. - Cool and wet conditions facilitate grey-black
mycelial growth of Botrytis.
13Botrytis Stem Canker Impatiens, Poinsettia
14Botrytis Blight
15Botrytis Crown Rot - lisianthus
16Botrytis Blight GeraniumResults from infected
flowers
17Botrytis Dieback - Geranium
18Botrytis Blight
19Disease Cycle
- This fungus is not specific and will grow on many
different plants and plant debris. - Under cool wet conditions profuse sporulation
results and spores are moved to roses by air
currents or blowing rain. - A minor wound in a bud or flower, or perhaps a
pruning cut will provide the initial point of
entry. - As the infection progresses more sporulation
results and additional sites become infected. - The fungus is a low level parasite and will
colonize wound sites as well as dead plant
material.
20Control
- Prevention is the best means of control. This can
be accomplished through intense sanitation
procedures. - By elimination of opportunistic colonization on
dead material, the amount of sporulation can be
reduced. - Good ventilation is also essential in reducing
disease incidence. Some sprays may give short
term relief but the fungus usually becomes
quickly resistant. - In greenhouse conditions special covers are used
to reduce the levels of ultraviolet light
required by the fungus for sporulation. - In most cases, removal of infected plant parts
and protection of wounds by chemicals is all that
can be done until warmer and dryer conditions
prove too unfavorable for continuing disease.
21Black Spot
- Caused by the fungus Diplocarpon rosae. The
disease can cause almost complete defoliation of
bushes by early fall. - It produces a weakened bush on which cane
dieback, stem canker, and winter injury can
become severe.
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23Symptoms
- Circular black spots ranging from 1/16 inch to
1/2 inch in diameter appear generally on leaves
upper sides. - The spots are frequently surrounded by a yellow
halo. Infected leaves characteristically turn
yellow and fall prematurely. - This leaf spot can be distinguished from others
by the fringed margin and consistently black
color. - Cane infection produces a reddish-purple spot.
- In many varieties, pale flower color is
indirectly caused by infection.
24Disease Cycle
- Black spot is spread by splashing water.
Infection occurs after leaves are wet for several
hours. - Therefore, the disease is more serious during
periods of rainfall.
25Control
- A preventive program for black spot should begin
with a thorough cleanup in the fall. Diseased
leaves on the ground should be raked and
destroyed. - All diseased canes should be pruned off by
cutting several inches into good wood. - A fungicide program should start in the summer
just before leaves become spotted. From then
until frost, the leaves may require a protective
fungicide coating. When the leaves are growing
rapidly or during rainy weather, it may be
necessary to spray the plants two times a week. - However, if growth is less rapid and rains are
less frequent, spraying at 7 to 10 day intervals
is usually sufficient
26Daylily Rust
- Daylily rust is caused by the fungus Puccinia
hemerocallidis and affects the leaves and scapes.
- It is not a new disease of daylilies, having been
reported previously in China, Taiwan, Korea,
Japan and Russia. - Unfortunately, the disease has now arrived in
North America, and was first identified in the
southeastern United States in August 2000.
Because of widespread shipping of infected
plants, by late 2001 daylily rust had been
identified in approximately 30 US States, Canada
and Australia. In nature, however, the main
method of rust spread is by wind borne spores
27Daylily Rust
- While daylily rust may kill the foliage on some
cultivars, it is unlikely in the short term to
actually kill the infected plant. However, it is
not yet known what the effects of continuous
infection will be on individual daylilies
28Symptoms
29Symptoms and Signs
30Symptoms and Signs
31Disease Cycle
32Disease Cycle
- It is not known where the rust overwinters.
- It has successfully overwintered in some States
of USDA Hardiness Zone 7 and milder as of April
2002 . - There are three possible ways that this rust may
survive the winter. - The first is as urediospores, the orange powder
produced from the spots (known as pustules) on
daylily leaves. - Some rusts overwinter as mycelium (the strands
which form the body of the fungus inside the
leaf) but this can only take place where the
plant tissue remains alive. - The third means by which rusts can overwinter is
in the form of teliospores.
33Disease Cycle
- Teliospores are typically hardier and more
durable than the urediospores and lie dormant on
dead daylily leaves over winter. - These new spores must be transported by the wind
or other means to a plant of the alternate host,
Patrinia, which is a perennial plant also of
Asian origin. Thus it is possible that in
climates where the rust cannot survive the winter
as mycelium or urediospores, it may still be able
to continue the infection in the subsequent year
if there is a plant of Patrinia in the vicinity. - Patrinia is not common at the moment in North
America, but several species are being offered
for sale both as plants and seeds. Not only does
it pose a threat to daylilies as far as
overwintering of the rust is concerned, but the
rust life cycle stage on Patrinia is a form of
sexual reproduction which may increase the
chances of new races of daylily rust developing.
34Control
- Cultivar selection
- It is generally recommended to remove the foliage
from all plants discovered to have rust, cutting
just above the soil level. - Fungicide applications mancozeb, chlorothalonil,
azoxystrobin and triadimefon - Overhead watering should be avoided wherever
possible