Title: Late Blight
1Late Blight
2Late blight caused the Irish potato famine
3Why the resurgence of LB as a problem in potatoes?
- New strains of the pathogen
- US-8 emerged in 1990s (1995 - caused severe
damage to Columbia Basin potato crop) - US-8 is more aggressive (lesions expand faster)
than US-1, the older strain - US-8 is here in Oregon
- Other new strains (US-6, US-7, US-11, and US-17?)
are particularly pathogenic to tomatoes
4Late Blight Disease Cycle
Causal agent Phytophthora infestans (Oomycete,
related to algae)
http//www.apsnet.org/education/LessonsPlantPath/L
ateblit/CYCLE.HTM
5http//www.apsnet.org/education/LessonsPlantPath/L
ateblit/PATHBIO.HTM
Sporangia
Flagellated zoospore
Oospore
Sporangium germinating directly
6June 29 2005
Gigot, J. 2005
Disease progression in Ray and Tims potato field
in Mt. Vernon WA Photos by Jessica Gigot, WSU
7Gigot, J. 2005
Epicenter of late blight epidemic on organic
potato field in western Washington.
8Photos by Jessica Gigot
Gigot, J. 2005
Gigot, J. 2005
9Photos by Jessica Gigot
Gigot, J. 2005
Gigot, J. 2005
Late blight lesions
Gigot, J. 2005
10Gigot, J. 2005
Late blight stem lesions
Photos by Jessica Gigot
11Photos by Jessica Gigot
July 15 2005
June 28 2005
Gigot, J. 2005
Gigot, J. 2005
Disease progression in Ray and Tims potato field
in Mt. Vernon WA Photos by Jessica Gigot, WSU
12http//www.apsnet.org/education/LessonsPlantPath/L
ateblit/SYMPTOM.HTM
13http//www.evergreen.edu/cell/projects/tomatoresul
ts/examples/LB_topbottom.jpg
www.evergreen.edu/cell/projects/tomatoresults/exam
ples/LB_fruitA.jpg
Symptoms on tomato
14Early blight
(Alternaria solani)
15Disease Triangle
Susceptible
16Disease Triangle
X
Susceptible
17Disease Triangle
Susceptible
X
18Disease Triangle
Susceptible
X
19Conditions Favorable For Disease
High humidity (above 90) and average
temperatures in the range of 50 to 78F favor
the disease. Optimal environment for production
of sporangia is 100 relative humidity and
60-70F. In presence of free water, sporangia
germinate in 2 hrs and infect 2 hrs later.
Inside plant tissue pathogen grows best at
62-70F. Under favorable conditions, new
spores can be produced in 4-5 days to repeat the
cycle.
20Late Blight Option
- Cultural management
- Resistant cultivars
- Chemical control (coppers)
21Destroy all overwintering inoculum sources
- Destroy culls (composting, burial)
- Eradicate volunteer potatoes, solanaceous plants
and weeds
22Plant disease-free tubers
- Certified seed can contain up to 1 LB diseased
tubers! - Know that your seed source is reliable.
- Inspect your seed for disease.
23Design your system to minimize leaf wetness
-
- adopt a wide row spacing
- dont over-apply N (delays maturity and
increases canopy size) - manage irrigation to minimize duration of leaf
wetness - Dont irrigate late afternoon or early morning
- Use drip irrigation if possible
- plant rows parallel to prevailing winds
- do not plant in areas prone to standing water or
impeded air flow
24Photos from Jessica Gigot
Gigot, J. 2005
Diagnostics and scouting
- know how to ID potato diseases
- scout your fields regularly for early detection
and intervention
Gigot, J. 2005
25Other cultural strategies
Destroy (flaming, flailing) diseased foliage to
prevent spread through field Maintain high
hills (good tuber cover) so spores from foliage
cannot get to tubers Destroy foliage several
weeks before harvest so all foliar tissue is
dead. The pathogen cannot live on dead tissue
so this reduces the potential for infecting the
tubers. Inspect your tubers for diseases before
storing, and discard infected tubers.
26Copper fungicides
- Copper fungicides are protectants, so they must
be applied to the foliage before infection. The
copper ion is absorbed by the germinating spore,
and the copper denatures spore proteins. - Coppers must be applied regularly throughout the
potato production season this can be 8 or more
sprays per season! - Coppers are considered synthetics by the NOP and
are permitted with restrictions. - Champion WP (copper hydroxide) appears to be the
material most used by organic growers and its
efficacy against several foliar diseases in
organic tomato production systems has been
documented. - In the BlightMOP project they controlled LB with
6 sprays of 0.9 lbs/A each as oxychloride, and
this total application rate fell within the more
restrictive EU guidelines and did not result in
increased soil Cu contents.
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30Cultivar Resistance
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32Sante was considered the most resistant main crop
cultivar that also yielded well in organic
systems. Leifert thinks that Sante has lost
resistance over the course of the 5 years of the
project.
33Foliar blight England 2001
Foliar blight ()
Julian day
September
August
October
34Promising varieties Switzerland
Foliar blight
Tuber blight
- Test variety
- Appell
- Derby
- Eden
- Innovator
- Markies
- Naturella
Yield
35Promising varieties France
Foliar blight
Tuber blight
- Test variety
- Derby
- Eden
- Emeraude
- Escort
- Estima
- Lizen
- Naturella
- Nicola
Yield
36Promising varieties England
Foliar blight -
Tuber blight
- Test variety
- Claret
- Donella
- Eve Balfour
- Lady Balfour
- Princess
- Sarpo Axona
- Sarpo Mira
- Sarpo Tominia
Yield -
37Promising varieties Norway
Foliar blight -
Tuber blight -
- Test variety
- Grom
- Peik
- N 84-422
- N 89-1756
- N 92-15138
- Santé
Yield
38Cultural Practices
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46BlightMOP Conclusions
- Breeding tolerant/resistant cultivars is the best
strategy for managing LB organically. We need
ongoing LB breeding programs as tolerance will
break down over time. - Copper oxychloride (6 sprays _at_ 0.9 lbs/A) slows
disease progress and met the EU limit for Cu
application. - Chitting did not control LB.
- Irrigation management reduces LB.
- Nutrient management increases yield but doesnt
reduce foliar LB. - Organic soil management might be helping manage
tuber LB. Tuber resistance reduces tuber LB. - Compost teas (etc.) have worked vs. Botrytis in
greenhouse culture but they have not been
effective in suppressing LB in field potatoes.
Rhubarb extract controls LB but you have to grow
a field of rhubarb for every field of potato.
47Variety Trials This Project
48Resistant Cultivars (available in OR now)
- On-farm trials of commercially available
cultivars - Island Sunshine (dark yellow flesh)
- Santé (light yellow flesh)
- Jacqueline Lee (yellow flesh)
- Defender (russet)
- What about Ozette and other unusual cultivars?
- Research station trials of numbered lines
- MSJ456-4 (round white from MI)
- AO96141-3 (russet)
- NDA5507-3Yf (yellow flesh)
- VC1009-1W/Y (yellow flesh)
- AC97521-1R/Y (red skin yellow flesh)
- Others?
49EU Cultivars of interest
- Eden
- Eve Balfour
- Lady Balfour
- Sarpo Axona
- Sarpo Mira
- Escort
- Naturella
- Torridon?
- Tollocan?
- N89-1756 (Norway)
- N92-15138 (Norway)
50Jacqueline Lee
51Island Sunshine
52Sante
53Defender
54Ozette
55Lady Balfour
56Sarpo Axona
57Late Blight Option what farmers can expect
- Early season visit (Stone and Selman - and Mosely
if available) to discuss potato system and
troubleshoot inoculum sources and cultural
practices - Diagnostics and scouting (staff and/or farmer
depending on farm) throughout season - On-farm variety trial of available cultivars
(evaluate marketability, productivity, and
resistance if disease occurs) - Research station variety trial (inoc. with US-8)
with farmer interaction - On-farm trials if growers are interested (copper
fungicides?)