Title: Diseases of Cucurbits
1Diseases of Cucurbits
- Types of Cucurbits
- Those grown in IL
- Production facts
- Etc.
2Diseases Covered
- Watermelon fruit blotch
- Bacterial wilt
- Anthracnose
- Powdery mildew
3Production of squash seed
4Harvesting for seed
5DISEASE Watermelon Fruit Bloch
- CROP Watermelon, other cucurbits are hosts
- PATHOGEN Acidovorax avenae subsp. Citrulli
- DISTRIBUTION FL, SC, NC, MD, IN, LA
- PATHOGEN DESCRIPTION Bacterium
- Gram-negative, straight rod, motile, peritrichous
flagella.
6Disease Symptoms
- Foliage
- Infected transplants- dark, water-soaked areas on
the underside of cotyledons and first leaves. - Necrotic lesions may appear on the foliage.
- Young seedlings may develop lesions on the
hypocotyl, causing eventual collapse and death. - Disease symptoms on foliage in the growing season
may not be obvious or confused with other
diseases. - Symptoms on transplants can go away, and return
with symptoms on fruit!!!
7Disease Symptoms
8Disease Symptoms and Signs
- Fruit
- Begin as small, water-soaked areas (few
millimeters in diameter), rapidly expand into
larger lesions with irregular margins. - The entire surface of the fruit may become
covered with dark green, greasy-looking lesions. - Older fruit lesions become necrotic and may
crack. -
- Whitish bacterial ooze may exude from the splits,
later infected fruit will rot.
9Disease Symptoms
10Disease Cycle
11Disease Development
- Introduced into fields with infested seed,
infected transplants, natural spread via
alternate host (wild cucurbits or volunteer
watermelon). - Infected transplants represent most important
means of disease transmission infected
transplants may be asymptomatic lead to high
numbers entering a field. - Warm, wet weather in May-June favors the
bacterium and disease. - Disease can develop quickly, 100 infection from
just a few primary infection sites.
12Control of Fruit Blotch
Prevention Avoid introduction of bacterium
(pathogen-free seed) Inspection of seedlings and
destroy suspicious flats Decontaminate if
contact is made with infected plants Chemical Str
eptomycin (illegal, not labeled) is used in dire
situations in the greenhouse to stop the spread
of the pathogen
13Control of Fruit Blotch
In the field Culls and plant debris should be
plowed under Rotate to new areas away from
contaminated fields Choose less susceptible
varieties Those with light green rinds more
susceptible Light and dark green striped more
resistant Solid dark green varieties are most
resistant Bacterium moved by wind-driven rain
or by mechanical means. Avoid contaminated fields
when wet. Copper-based fungicides can reduce
incidence of fruit symptoms.
14DISEASE Bacterial Wilt
- CROP Cucurbits
- PATHOGEN Erwinia tracheiphila
- DISTRIBUTION North America, Europe, Asia, Africa
- PATHOGEN DESCRIPTION Bacterium
- Gram-negative, straight rod, motile, peritrichous
flagella.
15Disease Symptoms and Signs
- Crops affected are mainly cucumber and
cantaloupe, but also squash and pumpkin to a
limited extent. Watermelon is not affected. - Foliage wilts suddenly, frequently on a single
runner at first, followed by wilting of the
entire plant. - Wilt is permanent. Bacteria are abundant in the
vascular tissue and exude in white droplets from
vascular bundles on cut stems. - The viscous bacterial mass will 'string-out' when
the cut ends of the stem are touched together.
16Bacterial wilt of cucurbits
17Bacterial wilt of cucurbits (pumpkin)
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19Conditions for Disease Development
- The pathogen survives for extended periods in its
cucumber beetle vectors. It is transmitted by the
striped beetle, Acalymma sp. and the spotted
beetle, Diabrotica sp. therefore, conditions
conducive to development of the vectors favor the
occurrence of the disease.
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22Control Measures
- Rogue diseased plants to prevent secondary spread
of the pathogen. - Control cucumber beetles with insecticides.
- Some cultivars are more tolerant than others, if
available they should be used.
23DISEASE Anthracnose
- CROP Cucurbits
- PATHOGEN Colletotrichum lagenarium (imperfect
(asexual) stage) Glomerella cingulata var.
orbiculare (sexual stage) - DISTRIBUTION Worldwide
24Pathogen Description Fungus
- Cylindrical, hyaline conidia arc produced on
lesions in pinkish masses in acervuli also
bearing two to three septate, brown setae.
25Pathogen Description Fungus
Formation of appresorium
Two-celled conidium
26Disease Symptoms and Signs
- The disease is particularly damaging to
watermelon, cucumber, and cantaloupe, but also
may occur on most other cucurbit crops. - On cucumber and cantaloupe, leaf lesions are
circular and brown up to 1 cm in diameter, while
on watermelon the leaf lesions arc black and
somewhat smaller. - Petiole and stem lesions arc elliptical in shape
and sunken. - Fruit lesions appear at or near maturity as
water-soaked spots that develop into sunken,
circular lesions lined with dark fungal stroma
bearing masses of pink spores.
27Anthracnose of cucurbits
cucumber
watermelon
28Anthracnose of cucurbits (watermelon)
Sunken lesions with pink/salmon colored
sporulation
29Disease Cycle
Pathogen persists in crop debris, seedborne and
may survive on volunteer plants or cucurbit
weeds Conidia are the main means of in-field
spread and are dispersed by watersplash and wind
blown rain.
30Control
- Cultural
- Use commercially produced, disease-free seed.
- 2. Rotate vine crops with unrelated crops in a
three-year rotation. - 3. Practice good sanitation by plowing under
fruits and vines at the - end of the season.
- 4. Choose anthracnose-resistant varieties if at
all possible. Resistant cucumber slicers include
Dasher II and Slicemaster. Many pickling
cucumbers are tolerant or resistant, including
Score and Premier. Resistant watermelon varieties
include Charleston Gray, Crimson Sweet, and Dixie
Lee.
31Control
FungicidesApply approved fungicides to the crop
at regular intervals, more often if frequent
rains occur. Among fungicides available are
chlorothalonil (Bravo), benomyl (Benlate), and
maneb and mancozeb formulations. An effective
spray treatment has been the combination of Bravo
with Benlate or mancozeb. If angular leaf spot
should be a problem, substitute a copper compound
for Benlate in the combination.
32Powdery Mildew
33Powdery Mildew
- Pathogen Erysiphe cichoracearum, Sphaerotheca
fuliginea - Cylindrical, hyaline conidia are produced in
chains on conidiophores that arise from surface
mycelial growth.
34Symptoms and Signs
35Signs of the Pathogen
36Symptoms and Signs
- All cucurbits are susceptible to powdery mildew
- Symptoms appear first as pale yellow spots on
leaves and stems - Sporulation becomes evident as white powdery
masses of conidia are produced over the lesion
surface - Leaves and stems become chlorotic, then turn
brown and dry prematurely.
37Conditions for Disease Development
- The pathogens are obligate parasites and can
persist on wild cucurbits or crop plants - Disease development can occur over a wide range
of temperatures as long as there sufficient
moisture for spore germination and infection. - These conditions can be provided by high relative
humidity or dew formation in the absence of
rainfall. - Inoculum is airborne for long distances
38Control Strategies
- Avoid crowding of plants
- Resistant cultivars of many crops available,
pumpkin is exception - Fungicide sprays are available, but may not be
cost effective - Sanitation and practices that avoid lush growth
help to delay spread