Rhizopus head rot
C/O: Rhizopus stolonifer
Symptoms:
- dark spots on the back of ripening heads, followed by a watery soft rot that later turns brown.
- As disease progresses, heads dry prematurely, shrivel, and tissues appear to shred.
- Inside shredded tissues, coarse, thread-like mycelial strands are observed, followed by the appearance of small black dots (sporangia).
- Sporangia are filled with spores that are easily released and wind-blown to other plants.
- Symptoms on the flower side of heads include the appearance of mycelium, a grayish, fuzzy substance that is covered with sporangia.
Etiology:
Pathogen produces dark brown or black coloured, non-septate hyphae.
The sporangiospores are dark coloured and ovoid.
Disease cycle:
- Saprophyte in nature
- Resting satge: zygospore
- Primary inoculum: zygospore, sporangiospore
- Secondary inoculum: wind borne conidia
- Transmission: air, water
Favorable condition:
- high temperatures and high relative humidity
- Prolonged rainy weather at flowering.
- Damage is caused by insects and caterpillars.
Management
- Treat the seeds with thiram or carbendazim at 2g/kg.
- Control the caterpillars feeding on the heads.
- Spray the head with Mancozeb at 2kg/ha during intermittent rainy season and repeat after 10 days, if the humid weather persists.