08/12/2021 / By Mary Villareal
Phytophthora blight — a vine infection that damages vegetables like peppers, cucumbers, squash and pumpkins — is showing up early this year, and it could threaten the availability of pumpkin pie fillings for Thanksgiving.
“After the middle of August, or close to the end of the season in September or so it’s not so bad. But this year, in the first week of July, is too much,” said Mohammad Babadoost, professor of plant pathology at the University of Illinois.
Babadoost detected phytophthora in his pumpkin test plot near Morton, Illinois. This is especially concerning because phytophthora has been responsible for wiping out entire pumpkin harvests in previous years. Illinois is the biggest pumpkin producer in the U.S., supplying more than 90 percent of canned pumpkins sold in the country.
“If we do not have enough processed pumpkins, we may not have enough canned pumpkin for, let’s say, Thanksgiving,” he adds.
Phytophthora symptoms are usually generalized: They cause weakness and slow collapse in affected plants. Early warning signs are few, and some plants wilt and die from water stress during the first warm weather after infection. However, others linger for several years. Phytophthora blight can infect crops such as peppers, tomatoes, eggplants, and often, pumpkins.
Previously identified as a fungus, phytophthora is an oomycete, also known as a water mold. Oomycetes are more close relatives with certain kinds of algae. Phytophthora has swimming spores called zoospores that can swim through films of water and saturated soils. Because of this, new infections often occur in the direction of water drainage.
Phytophthora thrives in warm, wet conditions and is common in low-lying, poorly drained areas of the garden or field. However, it can spread if environmental conditions are right, as spores can travel via rain or in soil stuck to equipment used in an infested area. (Related: Green tea for greener pastures: Plants treated with spent green tea extracts are less likely to develop disease.)
Here are some symptoms to help you identify phytophthora blight in your plants:
Below are some tips to prevent and manage phytophthora without using chemical pesticides.
Phytophthora is a disease that has substantial economic impact. It is also challenging to eradicate, so make sure to take simple preventative measures against phytophthora to help save your garden or field crops.
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Tagged Under: crops, fruit rot, fungus, green living, harvest, home gardening, homesteading, oomycete, organic farming, phytophthora, Phytophthora blight, prevention, pumpkins, root rot, soil infestation, tips, water mold
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