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How to Manage Pests
UC Pest Management Guidelines
Cole Crops
Sclerotinia Diseases
Pathogens: Sclerotinia sclerotiorum, S. minor
(Reviewed 6/07,
updated 6/07)
In this Guideline:
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Two species of Sclerotinia cause disease on cole crops. Sclerotinia minor only infects stems or leaves in close contact with
the soil. Once infection takes place, water-soaked, brown necrotic areas
develop on these structures. The necrotic areas rapidly turn into soft, watery
rots. Plants then wilt and collapse. Profuse amounts of white mycelial growth
and numerous small (up to 0.125 inch or 3 mm), black, hard resting bodies
called sclerotia, form on the outside and inside of the stems. Sclerotinia sclerotiorum can also infect lower leaves and stems, causing the
same type of symptoms as S. minor. In
addition, S. sclerotiorum forms tiny, brown, mushroomlike bodies (apothecia)
that release aerial spores, which can infect any of the upper leaves and
flowers. If conditions are right, these spores cause a watery, soft rot of
these tissues as well. Sclerotinia sclerotiorum forms sclerotia that are larger (0.25–0.5
inch) on average than those of S. minor.
Sclerotia of both species enable the pathogens to survive in soil
for a number of years without susceptible hosts. Wet soil conditions favor
disease development. On crucifers, S. sclerotiorum tends to be the more important pathogen, while S.
minor is only
found infrequently. For S. sclerotiorum, cool and moist conditions are necessary for development of and
infection by the spores. The aerial spores usually only infect injured or
senescing leaves and flowers.
Crop rotations and deep inversion plowing may be helpful in reducing
severity of S. minor infections. Deep plowing or soil inversion reduces
the number of sclerotia of S. sclerotiorum in the particular field, but has no effect on
incoming aerial spores from surrounding fields and from long distances.
Chemical treatments are usually not required for Sclerotinia
diseases in fresh market cole crops, but may be necessary in seed production
fields. Currently only iprodione (Rovral) is registered for use on broccoli.
UC IPM Pest Management Guidelines: Cole Crops
UC ANR Publication 3442
Diseases
S. T. Koike, UC Cooperative Extension, Monterey County
K. V. Subbarao, Plant Pathology,UC Davis, Salinas
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