Title: Microdochim Blight of Pumpkin White Speck
1Microdochim Blight of Pumpkin(White Speck)
- L. H. Rhodes, R. M. Riedel,
- G. Sutton, L. Wutz, and R. Precheur
- The Ohio State University, Columbus
2Microdochium Blight of Pumpkin (White Speck)
- A serious fungal disease of pumpkin and gourd.
- Favored by hot humid weather with frequent rains.
- Caused by the fungus Plectosporium tabacinum
(formerly Microdochium tabacinum)
3Importance
- Blights foliage of mature plants.
- Kills developing shoots.
- May kill small plants.
- Produces unsightly lesions on fruit.
- Reduces yield.
- Blights
4Disease Symptoms
5Diamond-shaped lesions are found on stems,
petioles, and leaf veins.
6Lesions on fruit are small, irregular specks
7Individual lesions merge together to form large
area of dead tissue.
8Heavily infected green fruit.
9Field Symptoms
- Disease appears suddenly and develops rapidly.
- Uniform development throughout field.
- Uniform development on individual leaves and
fruit.
10History of Microdochium Blight (White Speck) in
U. S.
- 1981 Louisiana
- Reported as a new disease of cucurbits
- Given name White Speck
- Pathogen described but unidentified.
- 1988 Tennessee
- 1989 Found in Ohio (Ross Co.)
11The Pathogen Plectosporium tabacinum
- Also known as Fusarium tabacinum, Microdochium
tabacinum, Plectosphaerella cucumerina and at
least 5 other names. - Parasitizes a wide range of hosts, from tobacco
to crawfish. - Found worldwide.
- Considerable isolate variability.
12The Pathogen Plectosporium tabacinum
- Produces masses of spores in lesions on host
surface. - Spores dispersed primarily by splashing water.
- Importance of windborne spores not known.
- Survival most likely in infested crop debris in
soil.
13Hosts
- Wheat
- Milkweed
- Violet
- Muskmelon
- Pumpkin
- Many other plants
- Beet
- Tomato
- Potato
- Tobacco
- Celery
- Ginseng
14Are Weeds Sources of Inoculum in Pumpkin Fields?
152003 Weed Survey
- Examined weeds in Clark, Highland, Miami,
Champaign, Holmes, and Franklin Counties. - Weeds were growing among pumpkins with obvious
symptoms of Microdochium Blight. - Laboratory culturing done on lesions if
questionable.
16Weed Species Examined
- Purslane
- Canada thistle
- Giant ragweed
- Velvetleaf
- Lambsquarters
- Redroot pigweed
- E. Black Nightshade
- Dandelion
- Penn. smartweed
172003 Weed Survey
- No confirmed infection in any weeds examined.
- Detached leaves in moist chamber were colonized
by P. tabacinum when artificially inoculated. - Further experimental inoculations now being done
in greenhouse.
18Pathogen Variability
19Isolate 12-1 Pumpkin
Isolate 12-2 Bur-cucumber
Isolate 12-3 Pumpkin seedling
Isolate 12-4 Gourd debris
Control
Isolates vary in ability to cause disease in
pumpkin.
20Severity of 4 isolates of Plectosporium tabacinum
on Pumpkin (Greenhouse tests)
21Severity of 4 isolates of Plectosporium tabacinum
on Pumpkin (Greenhouse tests)
22Options for Control
- All commercial varieties are susceptible.
- Currently, fungicides are the only option for
adequate control.
23Effects of Fungicides on Disease Severity Ratings
for Microdochium Blight of Pumpkin, 7 days after
spraying.
24Effects of Fungicides on Disease Severity Ratings
for Microdochium Blight of Pumpkin, 14 days after
spraying.
25Acknowledgments
- Research support provided by
- The Ohio Vegetable and Small Fruit Research and
Development Program. - USDA/Ohio Department of Agriculture Block Grant.
- Ohio Agricultural Research and Development
Center.
26Acknowledgments
- Special thanks to
- Becky Lyon
- Jennifer Ariss
- Andy Wyenandt
- Harold Brown