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Post harvest diseases of potato

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Title: Post harvest diseases of potato


1
  • Post harvest diseases of potato

2
List of diseases
  • Black Leg - Erwinia carotovora
  • Dry rot - Fusarium coeruleum
  • Brown rot - Ralstonia solanacearum
  • Potato wart - Synchytrium endobioticum
  • Late blight - Phytophthora infestans
  • Scab - Streptomyces Scabies
  • Sclerotium rot - Sclerotium rolfsii
  • Silver scurf - Spondyocladium atrovirens
  • Charcoal rot - Macrophomina phaseolina

3
Black leg - Erwinia spp
  • Aerial stem rot tuber soft rot
  • Black leg begins from a contaminated seed piece
  • Stem bases - an inky-black to light-brown decay,
    extend up the stem from less than an inch to more
    than two feet
  • These enlarge into a soft, mushy rot that causes
    entire stems to wilt and die
  • Leaves - roll upward at the margins, become
    yellow, wilt often die

4
  • Potato tubers with soft rot have tissues
  • very soft and watery
  • have a slightly granular consistency
  • tissue is cream to tan-colored
  • black border separating diseased from healthy
    areas
  • In the early stages, soft-rot decay - odorless
  • Later a foul odor and a stringy or slimy decay
    usually develops as secondary decay bacteria
    invade infected tissues

Symptoms of black leg
5
  • Survival and spread
  • Blackleg - Erwinia carotovora subsp. atroseptica
  • Carried by contaminated seed tubers
  • Usually dormant and do not cause disease unless
    environmental conditions are favorable
  • Aerial stem rot - Erwinia carotovora subsp.
    Carotovora
  • Contained in infested soil or introduced to the
    crop by irrigation water, wind-blown rain, and
    insects
  • Tuber soft rot - caused by either of these
    soft-rot bacteria
  • Maggot flies (Hylemyia spp. and Phorlin spp.) -
    spread the black leg and soft rot
  • Epidemiology
  • High soil temperatures and bruising of seed
    tubers favor seed-piece decay
  • RH - 94 to 100 temp - 21 to 29oC

6
  • Management
  • Plant only certified, disease-free seed tubers
  • Seed treatment
  • Agallol-3(0.25) for 5 min
  • Streptomycin sulphate 0.1 for 10 min
  • Streptocycline ( 100 ppm) and copper sulphate (
    40 ppm) for 30 min
  • Harvest tubers only after the vines are
    completely dead to ensure skin maturity
  • Precautions to minimize cuts and bruises when
    harvesting and handling tubers
  • Storage - 55-60 F with 90-95 relative humidity
    for the first 1-2 weeks to promote wound healing

7
Dry rotF. solani var. coeruleum
  • Dry dark spots appear on the skin which later
    becomes sunken and wrinkled with irregular
    concentric rings
  • Spots shrinks and bursts out
  • Internal tissue becomes brown and shrunken with
    cavities filled with numerous white tufts of
    mycelium
  • Rotting progress into whole tuber which loses
    much of water and become dry hard, shriveled and
    light in weight

8
  • Fungus
  • Mycelium branched, septate
  • Hyphae break through the skin and form pustules
    on the surface
  • Pustule closely interwoven hyphae which give
    rise to branched conidiophores bearing conidia
  • Mode of spread and survival
  • Contaminated soil - chief source
  • Mycelium, conidia and chlamydospores - present in
    the soil
  • Conidia floating in the air or found on the floor
    and walls of stores infect injured tubers
  • Epidemiology
  • Temp -15 to 25oC
  • RH - 50

9
  • Management
  • Avoid injuries to tubers
  • Potatoes should be dried thoroughly and then
    stored in a cool place
  • To speed the healing process, hold tubers at 50
    to 60F with good ventilation and a RH of at
    least 95 for the first 2 to 3 weeks of storage

10
Brown rotRalstonia solanacearum
  • Bangle blight or bangili
  • Leaf- turns bronze colour, shrivel and die
  • Vascular system of stem, root, stolon and tuber
    turns brown
  • Ring disease - brown ring in the tuber due to
    discolouration of vascular bundles
  • Whitish bacterial exudate oozes from the vascular
    system of cut stems and cut tubers

11
  • Casual organism
  • Gram ve, rod shaped bacteria, polar flagellum
  • Forms no spores and capsules
  • Mode of spread and survival
  • Infected soil and seed tubers - source of
    infection
  • Decay plant parts release masses of bacteria in
    the soil - viable from season to season
  • Infection through wounds in roots which spread
    through vascular system into the stem

12
  • Epidemiology
  • Soil temp - 25 to 35oC
  • Moisture - 50
  • Optimum pH - 6.2 to 6.6
  • Management
  • Crop rotation - potato-wheat
  • High degree of resistance - clones of Solanum
    phureja

13
Late blightPhytophthora infestans
  • Irish famine - 1845-46
  • Symptoms
  • Leaves, stems and tubers
  • Water soaked spots appear on leaves, turn purple
    brown finally black colour
  • White growth develops on under surface
  • Stem breaks at these points and the plant topples

14
  • In tubers - purplish brown spots spread to
    entire surface
  • Tuber show rusty brown necrosis spreading from
    surface to the center

15
  • Fungus
  • Mycelium - endophytic, coenocytic and hyaline
  • Sporangiophores arise from internal mycelium
    through stomata on the tubers
  • Sporangia - multinucleate, thin walled, hyaline,
    oval shaped
  • Zoospores - biflagellate

Phytophthora infestans A, zoospores produced
within the lemon-shaped sporangia (B).
16
  • Mode of spread and survival
  • Infected tubers and infected soil - source of
    primary infection
  • Survival of fungus in fruiting stage or as
    dormant mycelium in the soil
  • Persisting of perennial mycelium in affected
    tubers from the field, stored and used as seed in
    next season
  • Epidemiology
  • Cool (12 to 15oC) and humid ( above 90 ) weather
    with rains alternating with warm (20o C) moist
    period

17
  • Control
  • S. demissum and S. phureja - used for breeding
    for disease resistant varieties
  • Varieties - Kufri Naveen, Kufri Jeevan, Kufri
    Alenkar, Kufri Moti
  • Bruising of tubers at harvest should be avoided
  • Regular spraying during growing season gives
    effective control- 10 to 15 days interval
  • Brestan 600g/ha
  • Zineb 0.2
  • Bordeaux mixture 1.0
  • Mancozeb (2 kg/ha)

18
Scab Streptomyces scabies
  • Shallow scab corky tissue which arises from
    abnormal proliferation of the cells of the
    periderm of the tuber
  • Lesions vary in size and shape and darker than
    the healthy skin
  • Corky lesions 1 to 3mm deep and darker than
    shallow lesions
  • Actinomycete attacks young tubers at a early
    stage of development

19
  • Actinomycete
  • Conidia produced by formation of septa, which
    contract to form narrow isthmuses between the
    cells
  • Conidia- cylindrical and hyaline
  • Mode of spread and survival
  • Affects cabbage, carrot, eggplant, onion, radish
  • Contaminated soil and infected tubers - source of
    infection
  • Pathogen may survive passage through digestive
    tract of animals and hence it may spread with
    farm yard manure

20
  • Control measures
  • Use disease free planting materials
  • Soil application of PCNB (30kg/ha) at the time of
    planting
  • Green manuring before planting effectively
    reduce disease incidence
  • Seed treatment - mercuric chloride 0.1
  • High degree of resistance - S. caldasii var.
    glabrescens,
  • S. chacoense S. commersonii
  • Varieties - Menominee, Russet Rural, Sebago

21
Potato wartSynchytrium endobioticum
  • Warts
  • As small white granular swellings on the eyes
  • Remain minute or may become as large as the tuber
  • Soft, pulpy, white to begin become black later

22
  • Fungus
  • Do not develop any mycelium
  • Produce summer sporangia thin walled
  • Sporangia release zoospores which attack the
    tubers

Live resting (winter) sporangium of S.
endobioticum.
23
  • Mode of survival and spread
  • Resting spores - viable in soil for 20-25 yrs
  • Withstand passage through the intestines of
    cattle
  • Spread - contaminated manure, soil, infected seed
    tubers
  • Epidemiology
  • Temp - 16.7 to 17.8oc
  • Presence of oxygen and nitrates in soil favours
    the germination of sporangia
  • Management
  • Resistant cultivars - Kufri Kanchar, Kufri
    Sherpa, Kufri Jyoti
  • Steam sterilization of soil
  • Soil treatment mercuric chloride and formalin
    5

24
Sclerotium rot Sclerotium rolfsii
  • Thick white strands of fungus appear at the
    collar region of the stem and roots
  • White fungal hyphae grow on the tubers which
    later start rotting and covered by fruiting
    bodies

25
  • Fungus
  • Silky white mycelium
  • Septate and branched hyphae
  • Globose, smooth surfaced sclerotia
  • Mode of survival - mycelium and sclerotia
    subsists in soil
  • Mode of spread - infected soil, in running water
    on farm implements

26
  • Epidemiology
  • Temp - 30-35oc
  • Thrives in sandy or loamy soil which are acidic
  • Alternate wet dry soil conditions favour the
    disease development
  • Management
  • Application of ammonium nitrate to the soil
  • Seed tuber treatment - PCNB_at_ 15 kg/ha
  • Resistant clones - S. acaule, S. multiinerruptum,
  • S. infundibuliformae
  • Resistant varieties - Kufri Bahar, Kufri Jyoti,
    Kufri Muthu, Kufri Sherpa

27
Charcoal rotMacrophomina phaseolina
  • Black spot (2-3mm in dia) develops around the
    lenticels which appears as whitish specks at the
    centre
  • On cutting - internal tissues shows black patches
    beneath the spots on the surface of the tuber
  • Fungus
  • Mycelium - sparse or fluffy
  • Hyphae - branched, septate and greyish white or
    brown
  • Sclerotia - minute, black and smooth
  • Conidiophores - simple and rod shaped
  • Conidia - one celled, hyaline, oval or elliptical

28
  • Mode of spread and survival
  • Pathogen present in the soil - primary source of
    inoculum
  • Entry of fungus - bruising of skin, insect damage
  • Sclerotia survive in the soil for more than 3
    yrs
  • Epidemiology
  • Disease is more severe in wet soil
  • Temp - 31oc
  • Management
  • Avoid bruising of tubers during harvest,
    collection and storage
  • Temp of store house should be low
  • Early maturing varieties - Kufri Chandramukhi,
    Kufri Alankar

29
Silver scurfSpondyocladium atrovirens
  • Lesions - brown, slightly depressed and circular
    with fimbriate margins
  • Dotted with minute black specks or sclerotia of
    the pathogen
  • Organism invades only the cork cells which are
    destroyed and slough off forming a scurf

30
  • Fungus
  • Hyphae septate, branched, hyaline and become
    brown with age
  • Conidia- dark brown, club shaped, thick walled
  • Hyphae form minute sclerotia
  • Pathogen live from season to season on the
    affected tubers and in the soil
  • Spread from diseased to healthy tubers in storage
  • Management
  • Use of disease free seed material
  • Seed treatment- mercuric chloride - 0.1 for 30
    min
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