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How to Manage Pests
UC Pest Management Guidelines
Cucurbits
Verticillium Wilt
Pathogen: Verticillium dahliae
(Reviewed 11/05,
updated 11/05)
In this Guideline:
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Verticillium wilt can affect all cucurbits. The first symptoms are
wilting and yellowing of crown leaves, which eventually dry up. Wilting
gradually progresses out toward the runner tips; in severe cases, the plant
dies. Death may take weeks. A light brown vascular discoloration in roots is
sometimes seen in cross section. Aboveground vascular tissue is also discolored
and can be seen by cutting through a node near the base of the plant. Tolerant
or resistant varieties may show symptoms but seldom die.
Verticillium dahliae survives for years in soil as tiny, dormant
sclerotia. The pathogen has a wide host range including many vegetable crops,
weeds, and trees. When roots of susceptible crops grow in close proximity,
sclerotia germinate and infect the roots. Verticillium wilt is most severe
during relatively cool periods and subsides during the hottest part of the
summer, but wilting is usually seen during warm dry periods when the plant is
under stress, such as after fruit set. The pathogen grows in the
water-conducting tissue (xylem), causing plugging and interference with water
transport.
Use tolerant or resistant varieties. Most shipping varieties of
cantaloupes grown in California have a moderate degree of resistance, and
honeydew melons have greater resistance than cantaloupes. The Persian cultivar
is highly susceptible. Do not plant highly susceptible melon varieties in
fields with high populations of V. dahliae. For example, avoid fields where cotton was growing
if it was severely infected by this disease. Soil solarization has been used
experimentally to control this disease in cotton and tomato, but has not been
tested in cucurbits because of its expense. Also, preplant fumigation with
chloropicrin effectively controls this disease but generally is not cost
effective.
UC IPM Pest Management Guidelines: Cucurbits
UC ANR Publication 3445
Diseases
R. M. Davis, Plant
Pathology, UC Davis
T. A. Turini, UC Cooperative Extension, Imperial Co.
W. D. Gubler, Plant Pathology, UC Davis
J. J. Stapleton, UC IPM Program, Kearney Agricultural Center, Parlier
Acknowledgment for contributions to the disease section:
B. J. Aegerter, Plant Pathology, UC Davis
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