| Disease (causal agent) |
Symptoms |
Survival of pathogen and effect of environment |
Comments on control |
Bacterial blight
(Xanthomonas campestris pv. incanae) |
Basal leaves turn yellow and drop.
Leaf scar is blackened. Soft, water‑soaked stem cankers later become
dark and sunken. Plant stems may break and fall over because they are weakened by the cankers. Black discoloration of the vascular system occurs. |
Seedborne and in plant debris;
also in soil for 2 years. Favored by cool, wet weather. Bacteria are spread by water. |
When buying seed, specify that it
be grown from seed treated in hot water (122° to 131°F for 10 minutes). Follow a 3‑year crop rotation. Avoid splashing water. |
Cottony rot
(Sclerotinia sclerotiorum) |
Girdling infections that cause
stems to turn chalky white. Cottony, white masses of fungus or large, black
sclerotia develop on and in stems. Black sclerotia may develop in seed pods in the shape of stock seed. |
As sclerotia in soil. Airborne
spores produced by sclerotia only infect weak or dying tissue. Sclerotia also produce hyphae that infect plant. Favored by cool, moist conditions. |
Avoid fields where disease has
occurred (common disease of many vegetable crops). Apply PCNB to soil before
planting. Spray foliage with thiophanate-methyl combined with mancozeb. more info * |
Foot rot or Wire stem
(Rhizoctonia solani) |
Brown rot of stem occurs at the
soil line; area later becomes a dry, sunken canker. Stems are girdled. Brown fungus strands are visible with a hand lens. Also causes damping-off of seedlings. |
Soilborne fungus. Favored by warm, moderately moist soil. |
Use PCNB on soil before planting.
Spray iprodione or thiophanate‑methyl over the row and bases of plants.
more info * |
Fusarium wilt
(Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. mathioli)
(Important in seed fields) |
Lower leaf veins turn yellow, then
entire leaf becomes yellow, withers, and drops. Basal leaves are affected
first. Plants are stunted. Seed pods turn a light‑tan color. Brown vascular discoloration occurs. |
Soilborne for many years; also
seedborne. A warm‑weather disease; rarely a problem in the winter grown cut‑flower crop. |
No control necessary for the cut‑flower
crop grown in cool, coastal areas. Fumigate soil with a methyl
bromide-chlorpicrin combination (tarped). more info * |
Gray mold
(Botrytis cinerea) |
A soft, brown decay that occurs on
flowers or entire flower heads. Woolly gray fungus spores form on decayed
tissues. Decay may also start on dead leaves and rot the growing points and flower buds. |
In plant debris. Favored by cool,
moist conditions and condensed moisture on plants. Spores (conidia) are airborne. |
Protect flowers with thiophanate‑methyl
in combination with mancozeb or treat with iprodione. Avoid overhead irrigation. more info * |
Leaf spot
(Alternaria raphani) |
Round to elongate, concentric,
brown spots covered with black, powdery spores. Spots are small at first, then turn gray‑green with water‑soaked margins. |
On growing stock, cruciferous
plants, and crop refuse. Favored by wet weather. Spores are airborne. Also found on other cruciferous crops. |
Destroy all plant refuse by
plowing under plants as soon as flowers are harvested. Spray with a copper fungicide or mancozeb during wet weather. Avoid overhead irrigation. |
Verticillium wilt
(Verticillium dahliae) |
Foliage yellows and wilts. Leaves
die and dry progressively upward from the base of the plant. Dark discoloration may occur in the vascular system. |
Soilborne as microsclerotia for
many years. Symptoms most severe when weather turns warm after a cool period.
Host range of this form of Verticillium is different from that of the common Verticillium. |
Avoid fields where disease has
occurred or fumigate soil with a methyl bromide‑chloropicrin
combination (tarped). This combination also controls most weeds, nematodes,
soil insects, and other fungi and bacteria. more info * |
Water mold root rots
(Phytophthora and Pythium spp.) |
Plants wilt easily or suddenly
collapse. Roots and crown become decayed. Also causes damping-off of seedlings. |
Soilborne pathogens. Associated with poorly drained, waterlogged soils. Spores are spread in water. |
Provide drainage and avoid
excessive irrigation. Plant on raised beds. Seed treatment helps control
damping‑off phase. Mefenoxam also effective. more info: Pythium Root Rot, Phytophthora Root and Crown Rots * |
| |
| Virus or viruslike disease |
Symptoms |
Host range and natural spread |
Comments on control |
Mosaic
(several viruses) |
Leaf mottling and flower breaking
occur. Leaf symptoms vary with different viruses. White and yellow varieties do not show flower breaking. |
In cruciferous weeds (mustard,
wild radish, shepherd's-purse, etc.). Spread by aphids. Not seedborne. Symptoms favored by cool weather. |
Destroy nearby weeds. Avoid fields
near uncontrolled weedy areas. Plow under stock as soon as the crop is cut. Control aphids. |
| Stock is
also susceptible to downy mildew* (Peronospora parasitica). |
| * For additional information, see section on Key Diseases. |