Plant Disease Agents - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 22
About This Presentation
Title:

Plant Disease Agents

Description:

Living organisms - including fungi, bacteria, viruses and nematodes ... Blue mold (apple) fungal spores and fruiting structures of cherry powdery mildew. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:296
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 23
Provided by: stephen138
Category:
Tags: agents | cherry | disease | plant

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Plant Disease Agents


1
Fungicides and Nematicides
Stephen J. Toth, Jr. Wayne G. Buhler Department
of Entomology Department of Horticultural
Science North Carolina State University North
Carolina State University
Photograph from Jack Bailey.
2
Plant Disease Agents
Brown necrotic lesions on potato foliage caused
by air pollution (ozone)
  • Living organisms - including fungi, bacteria,
    viruses and nematodes
  • Nonliving agents - including unbalanced soil
    fertility, toxic chemicals, air pollution, frost,
    drought, sunburn, wind and hail

Photograph by Gerald Holmes.
3
Identifying Plant Diseases
  • Symptom - reaction of the host plant to the
    living organism or nonliving agent (e.g., leaf
    spots, wilting, galls on roots)

Alternaria blotch on apple
Crown galls on peach
Photographs provided by Turner Sutton.
4
Identifying Plant Diseases
  • Sign - physical evidence of the presence of
    disease agent (e.g., mold or fungal spores,
    bacterial ooze)

Green mold on orange (Penicillium)
Bacterial ooze on crabapple (fire blight)
Photographs provided by Turner Sutton.
5
Fungi
  • Organisms that lack chlorophyll and obtain their
    food by living on other organisms
  • Reproduce by spores (aids in identification)
  • Attack crops above and below soil surface
  • Spread by wind, rain, insects, birds, soil,
    machinery and contaminated seed

Blue mold (apple) fungal spores and fruiting
structures of cherry powdery mildew. Scanning
electron micro-graphs by Alan Jones.
6
Bacteria
  • Microscopic, one-celled organisms that reproduce
    by dividing in half
  • Identified by plant symptoms or by signs of the
    bacteria
  • Spread by infected seed, humans, insects, birds,
    contaminated rainwater, irrigation water and
    equipment

Wildfire bacterium of tobacco (Pseudomonas tabaci)
Photograph provided by NCSU Plant Pathology
Department.
7
Viruses
  • Too small to be seen with ordinary microscope
  • Cannot complete their life cycle independently
  • Transmitted by insects, infected plants, fungi,
    nematodes, etc.
  • No pesticides available to control viruses
    control by using disease-free or resistant plants
    and cultural methods (e.g., crop rotation)

Scanning electron micrograph of tobacco mosaic
virus
Photograph provided by NCSU Plant Pathology
Department.
8
History of Fungicide Use
  • Prior to 1882 disease control with elemental
    sulfur and copper
  • From 1882 to 1934 disease control based on
    organo-metallics (fixed or organo-copper)
  • 1934 modern era of organic fungicides began with
    the dithiocarbamates (i.e., thiram)
  • 1943 EBDC fungicides introduced, greatly
    improved fungicidal activity

9
History of Fungicide Use
  • Before mid-1960s fungicides were protectives,
    used at pounds per acre
  • Mid-1960s to 1980s fungicides introduced with
    systemic and/or curative effects, used at pounds
    per acre
  • 1980s to 1990s sterol-inhibiting fungicides were
    introduced which are systemic fungicides with
    both protective and curative activities, used at
    ounces per acre

10
Types of Fungicides
  • Protective (preventative) application prevents
    the establishment of an infection
  • Curative application interrupts the development
    of an established infection before visible
    symptoms
  • Eradicant application interrupts further
    development of an established infection having
    visible symptoms
  • Residual remains on surface of the leaf and
    provides protection
  • Systemic movement of fungicide inside the plant
    (locally or throughout the plant)

11
Classes of Fungicides Inorganics
  • Inorganics are protective (preventative)
    fungicides
  • Sulfur one of oldest fungicides used, about 8
    million pounds used in 1990 in U. S. works as a
    general growth inhibitor advantages include
    cheap cost and ease of application (dusts)
    disadvantages include limited spectrum of
    activity (best on mildews), must be applied
    frequently at a high rate and phytotoxic at high
    temperatures
  • Copper phytotoxic to plants in elemental form
    (use uncommon)

12
Classes of Fungicides Copper
  • Copper is bound to organic and inorganic
    molecules in fixed-type coppers, less toxic to
    plants
  • Broad spectrum poison useful as fungicides and
    bactericides protective (preventative)
    fungicides
  • Bordeaux mixture (copper sulfate and hydrated
    lime), copper sulfate, copper hydroxide and other
    copper compounds

13
Classes of Fungicides Organics
  • Organics are protective (preventative) fungicides
  • Broad spectrum control, multi-site activity
  • Represent 60-70 of fungicides used
  • Dithiocarbamates thiram
  • Ethylenebisdithiocarbamates (EBDCs) manozeb,
    maneb and zineb
  • Captan one of the most widely used fungicides
    worldwide, broad spectrum control
  • Chlorothalonil (Bravo, Daconil 2787) widely
    used, ornamentals and turf

14
Classes of Fungicides Systemics
  • Systemic and/or curative activities
  • Benomyl (Benlate) broad spectrum, widely used
  • Thiophanate-methyl (Topsin-M) broad spectrum,
    turf and fruit
  • Iprodione (Chipco 26019, Rovral) broad spectrum,
    turf and ornamentals
  • Metalaxyl seed treatments (Apron), field and
    vegetable crops (Ridomil), and turf and
    ornamentals (Subdue) narrow spectrum of
    activity, effective against certain soil-borne
    diseases

15
Classes of Fungicides Systemics
  • Sterol inhibitors large group of fungicides,
    widely used, broad spectrum of activity, has both
    protective and curative activity include
    imazalil (Fungaflor), triforine (Funginex),
    fenarimol (Rubigan), mycobutanil (Nova),
    propiconazole (Tilt) and triadimefon (Bayleton)

16
Classes of Fungicides Fumigants
  • Highly volatile chemicals that have fungicidal
    activity include methyl bromide (controls fungi,
    nematodes, insects and weeds) and chloropicrin

Photograph from USDA/ARS.
17
Classes of Fungicides Antibiotics
  • Antibiotics are substances produced by
    microorganisms which inhibit growth of plant
    diseases in very dilute concentrations
  • Streptomycin (Agri-Mycin) used as dust, spray
    and seed treatment, mostly for bacterial diseases

18
Nematodes
  • Small, usually microscopic, roundworms
  • Nematodes parasitic to plants have a stylet
    (hollow feeding spear)
  • Feed on plant roots, stems, leaves and flowers
  • Above-ground symptoms include stunting,
    yellowing, loss of vigor and general decline of
    plants

Nematodes under light microscope. Photograph
provided by Tom Melton.
Damage to peanuts by sting nematodes. Photograph
from NCSU Plant Pathology Dept.
19
Nematodes
Root knot nematode damage on okra
Photographs from NCSU Plant Disease and Insect
Clinic.
20
Classes of Nematicides Fumigants
  • Exert toxic action as a gas
  • Methyl bromide used since 1941 potent biocide
    soil-fumigant that controls nematodes, fungi,
    insects and weeds
  • Chloropicrin used at the end of World War I now
    used as warning agent (2) with methyl bromide
    (98) mixed with 1,3-dichloropropene (Telone
    C-17)
  • Others 1,3-dichloropropene (Telone) and vapam
    (Busan)

21
Classes of Nematicides Non-fumigants
  • Less phytotoxic than fumigants
  • Extremely toxic to humans
  • Most are granular formulations, easier to apply
  • Organophosphates inhibit acetylcholinesterase,
    paralyze and kill nematodes include disulfoton
    (Disyston), ethoprop (Mocap) and fenamiphos
    (Nemacur)
  • Carbamates inhibit acetylcholinesterase,
    paralyze and kill nematodes include aldicarb
    (Temik), carbofuran (Furadan) and oxamyl (Vydate)

22
Reference
  • Ware, G. W. 1994. The Pesticide Book. 4th
    edition. Thomson Publications, Fresno,
    California. pp. 79-82, 139-153.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com