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Carrot Diseases

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This nematode is present in all parts of the world and can infect every vegetable ... Attacks by the nematode just behind the growing tip of the root cause excessive ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Carrot Diseases


1
Carrot Diseases
  • Alternaria Leaf Blight - Alternaria dauci
  • Cercospora Leaf Blight - Cercospora carotae
  • Pythium Root Dieback - Pythium spp.
  • Crater Rot - Rhizoctonia carotae
  • White Mold (Cottony Soft Rot) - Sclerotinia
    sclerotiorum
  • Root Knot - Meloidogyne spp.
  • Aster Yellows

2
Alternaria Leaf Blight
3
Alternaria Leaf Blight
4
Cercospora Leaf Blight
5
Cercospora Leaf Blight
6
Carrot Diseases - Alternaria and Cercospora Leaf
Blight - Key Points
  • Pathogens
  • Alternaria dauci
  • Distribution
  • both common in the temperate zone
  • Cercospora more readily attacks young leaves
  • Alternaria more readily attacks mature tissue
  • Symptoms
  • leaf symptoms similar but Alternaria leaf spots
    more irregular, darker brown than Cercospora
  • with both, lesions can girdle petiole, cause
    death of entire leaf
  • Transmission
  • both pathogens can be disseminated in or on the
    seed
  • spores of both disseminated by wind and splashing
    rain
  • both overwinter in infected debris in soil, weed
    hosts
  • Cercospora carotae

7
Carrot Diseases - Alternaria and Cercospora Leaf
Blight - Control Strategies
  • Use seed produced in arid regions of the country
  • Fall plowing with a 2-3 year rotation
  • Use currently registered fungicides
  • Resistant varieties (both Alternaria and
    Cercospora)
  • Caropak
  • Choctaw
  • Danvers 126
  • Huron
  • Orlando Gold
  • Seminole

8
Pythium
9
Pythium
10
Pythium
11
Carrot Diseases - Pythium Root Dieback Key Points
  • Symptoms
  • wilting or stunting of top growth (due to
    vascular disruption of roots)
  • forking of roots due to root tip dieback,
    unacceptable for processing
  • More serious in high organic soils (muck)
  • Various species of Pythium are implicated in this
    disease

12
Carrot Diseases - Pythium Root Dieback Control
Strategies
  • Rotation - at least three years without carrots
  • Avoid wet soils early in season

13
Crater Rot
14
Carrot Diseases - Crater RotKey Points
  • Pathogen Rhizoctonia carotae
  • Losses can reach serious proportions in cold
    storage under high relative humidity
  • Initial symptoms are small white hyphal knots
  • Small pits follow, which then enlarge into sunken
    craters

15
Carrot Diseases - Crater Rot Control Strategies
  • Any practice that hastens the drying of the top
    soil, such as cultivation, weed control and wide
    rows, should be practiced
  • Prompt lowering of the storage temperature to
    near 32 F is important
  • Store roots at relative humidity below 95
  • Do not reuse crates unless they have been steamed
    or dipped in an acceptable chemical disinfestant

16
White Mold
17
Carrot Diseases - White Mold Key Points
  • Pathogen Sclerotinia sclerotiorum
  • Fungus with very wide host range
  • Disease also called "Cottony Soft Rot"
  • Overwinters in the soil as sclerotia
  • Field infection is the most common, but infection
    in storage can occur due to contaminated crates
    or other storage containers/structures
  • Sclerotinia is a cool temperature pathogen,
    infecting primarily at temperatures of 55-65 F

18
Carrot Diseases - White Mold Control Strategies
  • Three year rotations using cereals and forage
    grasses
  • Storage crates and facilities should be
    disinfested
  • Storage temperature should be near 32 degrees F
    with a relative humidity of 95 or below

19
Root Knot Nematode
20
Root Knot Nematode
21
Carrot Diseases - Root-Knot Nematode Key Points
  • Pathogen Meloidogyne spp.
  • This nematode is present in all parts of the
    world and can infect every vegetable
  • The pathogen stimulates the root tissue causing
    giant cells to form which account for the galls
    seen on the roots
  • Attacks by the nematode just behind the growing
    tip of the root cause excessive branching of the
    roots
  • Infection seldom kills the host plant, but
    wilting, poor root quality and poor yields may
    result

22
Carrot Diseases - Root-Knot Nematode Control
Strategies
  • Fallow cultivation may help
  • Rotate with corn, grasses and small grains
  • Chemical fumigation, if permitted (not practical
    for the home gardener)
  • Rotation with other resistant varieties of
    vegetables such as Beefmaster, Better Bush,
    Empire, Celebrity, etc. tomatoes
  • See UWEX Publication A3110 for other resistant
    tomato varieties

23
Aster Yellows
24
Aster Yellows
25
Aster Yellows
26
Aster Yellows
27
Carrot Diseases - Aster YellowsKey Points
  • Pathogen Aster yellows phytoplasma
  • Wide host range - at least 300 species in 48
    families. Vegetable hosts include carrot,
    lettuce, escarole, endive and celery
  • Leafhopper transmitted
  • Symptoms
  • yellowing and bronzing of foliage
  • brooming of leaf tissue emerging from crown of
    plant
  • hairy roots and internal root necrosis
  • Overwintering
  • perennial weeds and ornamentals
  • insect vector on grasses or grain crops
  • leafhopper vectors from southern US carried north
    by wind

28
Carrot Diseases - Aster Yellows Control
Strategies
  • Eradicate overwintering weed and ornamental
    plants
  • Do not plant adjacent to other plants which are
    diseased
  • Plant as far as possible from grain and grass
    crops
  • Regular insecticide program to reduce leafhopper
    population
  • No resistant or immune varieties as yet
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