Title: Carrot Diseases
1Carrot 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.
2Alternaria Leaf Blight
3Alternaria Leaf Blight
4Cercospora Leaf Blight
5Cercospora Leaf Blight
6Carrot 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
7Carrot 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
8Pythium
9Pythium
10Pythium
11Carrot 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
12Carrot Diseases - Pythium Root Dieback Control
Strategies
- Rotation - at least three years without carrots
- Avoid wet soils early in season
13Crater Rot
14Carrot 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
15Carrot 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
16White Mold
17Carrot 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
18Carrot 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
19Root Knot Nematode
20Root Knot Nematode
21Carrot 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
22Carrot 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
23Aster Yellows
24Aster Yellows
25Aster Yellows
26Aster Yellows
27Carrot 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
28Carrot 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