Cotton Diseases PDF

Document Details

Chaudhary Charan Singh Haryana Agricultural University, Hisar, Haryana

Jayant Yadav

Tags

cotton diseases plant pathology agricultural diseases crop diseases

Summary

This document provides an overview of various diseases affecting cotton plants. It covers symptoms, causes, and management techniques for these diseases. It's a detailed study of plant pathology focusing on cotton.

Full Transcript

DISEASES OF COTTON (Gossypium spp.) Submitted By :- Jayant Yadav, C.C.S.H.A.University, Hisar, Haryana Introduction : Cotton is a soft, fluffy staple fiber that grows in a boll, or protective capsule, around the seeds of cotton plants of the genus Gossypium. Cotton is the...

DISEASES OF COTTON (Gossypium spp.) Submitted By :- Jayant Yadav, C.C.S.H.A.University, Hisar, Haryana Introduction : Cotton is a soft, fluffy staple fiber that grows in a boll, or protective capsule, around the seeds of cotton plants of the genus Gossypium. Cotton is the king of fibres, usually referred as white gold. Current estimates for world production are about 25 million tones annually. China is the worldˋs largest producer of cotton. Contd…. The United States has been the largest exporter for many years. Cotton is grown mainly for its fibre used in manufacture of cloth for the mankind. It is also used for several other purposes like making threads, for mixing in other fibres and extraction of oil from the cotton seed. Cotton seed after extraction of oil is a good manure and contains about 6% nitrogen, 3% phosphorous and 2% potash. Cotton seed, cotton linter and pulp obtained during oil extraction and cotton meal are good concentrated feed for cattle. cultivated cottons are annuals. Cultivated cotton is a herbaceous plant which attains a height of 60 to 200cm. The plant has a tap root with secondary roots that branch laterally from primary root. Cotton belongs to the malvaceae family and the genus Gossypium. The genus Gossypium has been one of the most difficult to classify. Genus Gossypium includes 50 species in which 46 are wild and 4 are cultivated. According to classification by Hutchison (1947) the following four cultivated species contain almost all the varieties of cotton in case of India. Gossypium arboreum Gossypium herbaceum Gossypium hirsutum Gossypium barbadense Objectives: To be familiar with the diseases found in the cotton. To be able to know the sign and symptoms of disease. To get maximum ideas regarding the control measures and management of disease found in cotton. To be familiar about the pesticides like fungicides, insecticides and their use in the crop at different times applying different methods 1. Bacterial blight or Angular leaf spot or Black arm Xanthomonas campestris pv. malvacearum Economic importance This disease was first observed in Tamil Nadu in 1918. It is an important disease in Maharashtra, Karnataka, A.P., Tamil Nadu and Madhya Pradesh. Symptoms The bacterium attacks all stages from seed to harvest. Usually five common phases of symptoms are noticed. i) Seedling blight: Small, water-soaked, circular or irregular lesions develop on the cotyledons. Later, the infection spreads to stem through petiole and cause withering and death of seedlings. ii) Angular leaf spot: Small, dark green, water soaked areas develop on lower surface of leaves, enlarge gradually and become angular when restricted by veins and veinlets and spots are visible on both the surface of leaves. As the lesions become older, they turn to reddish brown colour and infection spreads to veins and veinlets. iii) Vein blight or vein necrosis or black vein: The infection of veins causes blackening of the veins and veinlets, gives a typical ‘blighting’ appearance. On the lower surface of the leaf, bacterial oozes are formed as crusts or scales. The affected leaves become crinkled and twisted inward and show withering. The infection also spreads from veins to petiole and cause blighting leading to defoliation. Fig:- Bacterial Blight Fig:- Veinal Necrosis Fig:- Angular Leaf Spot Fig:- Boll Rot iv) Black arm: On the stem and fruiting branches, dark brown to black lesions are formed, which may girdle the stem and branches to cause premature drooping off of the leaves, cracking of stem and gummosis, resulting in breaking of the stem which hang typically as dry black twig to give a characteristic “black arm” symptom. v) Square rot / Boll rot: On the bolls, water soaked lesions appear and turn into dark black and sunken irregular spots. The infection slowly spreads to entire boll and shedding occurs. The infections on mature bolls lead to premature bursting of bolls. The bacterium spreads inside the boll and lint gets stained yellow because of bacterial ooze and looses its appearance and market value. The pathogen also infects the seed and causes reduction in size and viability of the seeds. Pathogen The bacterium is a short rod with a single polar flagellum. It is gram negative, non-spore forming and measures 1.0-1.2 X 0.7-0.9 μm. The bacterium is aerobic, capsule forming and produces yellow colonies in culture medium. Disease cycle The bacterium survives on infected dried plant debris in soil for several years. The bacterium is also seed-borne and remains in the form of slimy mass on the fuzz of seed coat. It multiplies soon after the seed is sown and infects the seedling through the micropyle. Volunteer plants that arise from the bolls falling off prematurely also provide a source of primary infection. The bacterium also attacks other hosts like Thurbaria thespesioides, Eriodendron anfructuosum and Jatropha curcas. The primary infection starts mainly from the seed-borne bacterium. The secondary spread of the bacteria may be through wind, wind blown rain splash, irrigation water, insects and other implements. The bacterium enters through natural openings or insect caused wounds. Favourable Conditions Optimum soil temperature of 280 C high atmospheric temperature of 30-400 C , relative humidity of 85 per cent, early sowing, delayed thinning, poor tillage, late irrigation and potassium deficiency in soil. Rain followed by bright sunshine during the months of October and November are highly favourable. Fig:- Disease Cycle of Angular Leaf Spot Management  Remove and destroy the infected plant debris.  Rogue out the volunteer cotton plants and weed hosts.  Follow crop rotation with non-host crops.  Early thinning, good tillage, early irrigation, early earthing up and addition of potash to the soil reduces disease incidence.  Grow resistant varieties like HG-9, BJA 592, G-27, Sujatha, 1412, HS-6 and CRH 71. Suvin is tolerant.  Gossypium herbaceum and G. arboreum are almost immune. G. barbadense, G.hirsutum, G. herbaceum var typicum and G. herbaceum var acerifolium have considerable resistance.  Delint the cotton seeds with concentrated sulphuric acid at 125ml/kg of seed.  Treat the delinted seeds with Carboxin at 2 g/kg seed or soak the seeds in 1000 ppm Streptomycin sulphate overnight or treat the seed with hot water at 52-560C for 10-15 minutes.  Spray with Streptomycin sulphate (Agrimycin 100), 500 ppm along with Copper oxychloride at 0.3%. 2. Fusarium wilt Fusarium oxysporum f.sp. vasinfectum Symptoms The disease affects the crop at all stages. The earliest symptoms appear on the seedlings in the cotyledons which turn yellow and then brown. The base of petiole shows brown ring, followed by wilting and drying of the seedlings. In young and grown up plants, the first symptom is yellowing of edges of leaves and area around the veins, i.e. Discolouration starts from the margin and spreads towards the midrib. The leaves loose their turgidity, gradually turn brown, droop and finally drop off. Symptoms start from the older leaves at the base, followed by younger ones towards the top, finally involving the branches and the 48 whole plant. The defoliation or wilting may be complete leaving the stem alone standing in the field. Sometimes partial wilting occurs; where in only one portion of the plant is affected, the other remaining free. The taproot is usually stunted with less abundant laterals. Browning or blackening of vascular tissues is the other important symptom, black streaks or stripes may be seen extending upwards to the branches and downwards to lateral roots. In severe cases, discolouration may extend throughout the plant starting from roots extending to stem, leaves and even bolls. In transverse section, discoloured ring is seen in the woody tissues of stem. The plants affected later in the season are stunted with fewer bolls which are very small and open prematurely Fig:- Browning of vascular bundles Fig:- Marginal chlorosis and necrosis Pathogen The fungus produces three types of spores. Macroconidia are 1 to 5 septate, hyaline, thin walled, falcate with tapering ends. The microconidia are hyaline, thin walled, spherical or elliptical, single or two celled. Chlamydospores are dark coloured and thick walled. The fungus also produces a vivotoxin, Fusaric acid which is partially responsible for wilting of the plants. Disease cycle The fungus can survive in soil as saprophyte for many years and chlamydospores act as resting spores. The pathogen is both externally and internally seed-borne. The primary infection is mainly from dormant hyphae and chlamydospores in the soil. The secondary spread is through conidia and chlamydospores which are disseminated by irrigation water. Favourable Conditions Soil temperature of 20-30 0C, hot and dry periods followed by rains, heavy black soils with an alkaline reaction, increased doses of nitrogen and phosphatic fertilizers, soil amendment with manganese and wounds caused by nematode (Meloidogyne incognita) and grubs of Ashweevil (Myllocerus pustulatus). Management  Treat the acid-delinted seeds with Carboxin or Chlorothalonil at 4 g/kg or Carbendazim@2g/kg seed.  Remove and burn the infected plant debris in the soil after deep summer ploughing.  Apply increased doses of potash with a balanced dose of nitrogenous and phosphatic fertilizers.  Multiply Trichoderma viride (2kg) in 50 kg of Farm yard manure for 15 days and then apply to the soil.  Apply heavy doses of farm yard manure or other organic manures at 10 t/ha. Follow mixed cropping with non-host plants to lower the soil temperature below 200C by providing shade.  Soil amendment with zinc.  Grow disease resistant varieties of G. hirsutum and G. barbadense like Varalakshmi, Vijaya, Pratap, Jayadhar, Jarila, Jyothi, G 22 and Verum, HD 324, HD 432. 3. Verticillium wilt Verticillium dahliae Economic importance The disease is a major disease in cotton in USA and USSR and was first reported in India during 1968 on hirsutum cottons in Coimbatore, Tamil Nadu. The disease usually appears in November and December when the crop is in squares and bolls, about three months after sowing. Symptoms The symptoms are seen when the crop is in squares and bolls. Plants infected at early stages are severely stunted. The first symptoms can be seen as distinct mottling of leaves with pale yellowish irregular areas at the margins and between the principal veins. The yellowish areas become pale, more whitish and extensively necrotic. The necrosis of the leaves spreads from lower to upper leaves and there is heavy defoliation. The affected leaves fall off leaving the branches barren. Infected stem and roots, when split open, show a pinkish to pinkish brown discolouration of the woody tissue which may be continuous or interrupted. Pinkish streaks alternating with healthy tissue (Tiger stripe) are seen on removing the bark of the roots, stem and petiole. The affected plants may bear a few smaller bolls with immature lint. Fig:- Pinkish discolouration Fig:- V. dahliae Fig:- Verticillium wilt infested plant Pathogen The fungus produces hyaline, septate mycelium and two types of spores. The conidia are single celled, hyaline, spherical to oval, borne singly on verticillate conidiophores. The micro sclerotia are globose to oblong, measuring 48-120 X 26-45um. Disease cycle The fungus also infects the other hosts like brinjal, chilli, tobacco and bhindi. The fungus can survive in the infected plant debris and in soils as microsclerotia upto 14 years. The seeds also carry the microsclerotia and conidia in the fuzz. The primary spread is through the micro sclerotia or conidia in the soil. The secondary spread is through the 50 contact of diseased roots to healthy ones and through dissemination of infected plant parts through irrigation water and other implements. Favourable Conditions Low temperature of 15-200 C, low lying and ill-drained soils, heavy soils with alkaline reaction and heavy doses of nitrogenous fertilizers favours the disease. Fig:- Disease Cycle of Verticillium Wilt Management  Treat the delinted seeds with Carboxin@4g/kg or Carbendazim at 2 g/kg.  Remove and destroy the infected plant debris after deep ploughing in summer months.  Apply heavy doses of farm yard manure or compost at 10t/ha.  Follow crop rotation by growing paddy or Lucerne or chrysanthemum for 2-3 years.  Spot drench with 0.05 per cent Benomyl or Carbendazim.  Grow disease resistant varieties like Sujatha, Suvin and CBS 156. 4. Root rot Rhizoctonia bataticola (Pycnidial stage: Macrophomina phaseolina) Economic importance This disease is severe in many parts of India, especially in Punjab and Gujarat. Symptoms The fungus causes three types of symptoms, viz., seedling disease, sore-shin and root rot. Germinating seedlings of one to two weeks old are attacked by the fungus at the hypocotyl and cause black lesions, girdling of stem and death of the seedling, causing large gaps in the field. In sore-shin stage (4 to 6 weeks old plants), dark reddish-brown cankers are formed on the stems near the soil surface which later turns dark brown or black and plant breaks at the collar region leading to drying of the leaves and subsequently the entire plant. Typical root rot symptom appears normally at the time of maturity of the plants. The most prominent symptom is sudden and complete wilting of plants in patches in concentric circles. Initially, all the leaves droop suddenly and die within a day or two. The affected plants when pulled reveal the rotting of entire root system except tap root and few laterals. The bark of the affected plant shreds and even extends above ground level. In badly affected plants the woody portions may become black and brittle. A large number of dark brown sclerotia are seen on the wood or on the shredded bark. Fig:- Root Rot Symptoms Pathogen The fungal hyphae are septate and fairly thick and produce black, irregular sclerotia which measure 100 μm in diameter. Disease cycle The disease is mainly soil-borne and the pathogen can survive in the soil as sclerotia for several years. The spread is through sclerotia which are disseminated by irrigation water, implements, heavy winds and other cultural operations. Favourable Conditions Dry weather following heavy rains, high soil temperature (35-39O C), low soil moisture (15- 20 per cent), cultivation of favourable hosts like vegetables, oil seeds and legumes preceding cotton and wounds caused by ash-weevil grubs and nematodes. Management  Treat the seeds with Trichoderma viride @ 4g/kg or Pseudomonas fluorescens @ 10g/kg of seed..  Treat the seeds with Carboxin or Thiram at 4 g or Carbendazim at 2g/kg.  Spot drench with 0.1% Carbendazim or 0.05% Benomyl.  Apply farm yard manure at 100 t/ha or neem cake at 2.5t/ha.  Adjust the sowing time, early sowing (First Week of April) or late sowing (Last week of June) so that crop escapes the high soil temperature conditions.  Adopt intercropping with sorghum or moth bean (Phaseolus aconitifolius) to lower the soil temperature. Grow resistant varieties like KH 33/1146, 15/KW-2 (MB) 5. Anthracnose Colletotrichum capsici Symptoms The fungus infects the seedlings and produces small reddish circular spots on the cotyledons and primary leaves. The lesions develop on the collar region, stem may be girdled, causing seedling to wilt and die. In mature plants, the fungus attacks the stem, leading to stem splitting and shredding of bark. The most common symptom is boll spotting. Small water soaked, circular, reddish brown depressed spots appear on the bolls. The lint is stained to yellow or brown, becomes a solid brittle mass of fiber. The infected bolls cease to grow and burst and dry up prematurely. Pathogen The pathogen forms large number of acervuli on the infected parts. The conidiophores are slightly curved, short, and club shaped. The conidia are hyaline and falcate, borne single on the conidiophores. Numerous black coloured and thick walled setae are also produced in acervulus. Disease cycle The pathogen survives as dormant mycelium in the seed or as conidia on the surface of seed for about a year. The pathogen also perpetuate on the rotten bolls and other plant 53 debris in the soil. The secondary spread is by air-borne conidia. The pathogen also survives in the weed hosts, viz., Aristolachia bractiata and Hibiscus diversifolius. Favourable Conditions Prolonged rainfall at the time of boll formation and close planting predispose the disease. Management  Treat the delinted seeds with Carbendazim or Carboxin@2g/kg or Thiram or Captan at 4g/kg.  Remove and burn the infected plant debris and bolls in the soil.  Rogue out the reservoir weed hosts.  Spray the crop at boll formation stage with [email protected]% or Copper [email protected]% or [email protected]% or [email protected]%. 6. Alternaria leaf spot Alternaria macrospora Symptoms The disease may occur in all stages but more severe when plants are 45-60 days old. Small brown, round spots surrounded by a purple margin appear on leaves. On older leaves the necrotic center of the spots may be marked by a pattern of concentric zonation. Several spots coalesce together to form blighted areas. Under humid weather conditions the spots appear as sooty black leading to premature defoliation. Sometimes stem lesions are also seen. In severe cases, the leaf stalk and bolls become infected with spherical or elliptical purple spots. Fig:- Alternaria Leaf Spot Disease cycle The pathogen survives in the infected crop debris as dormant mycelium. The secondary spread is mainly by air-borne conidia. Pathogen The fungus produces dark brown, short, 1-8 septate, irregularly bent conidiophores with a single conidium at the apex. The conidia are obclavate, light to dark brown in colour with 3- 9 transverse septa and 4 longitudinal septa, with a prominent beak. Favourable Conditions High humidity, intermittent rains and moderate temperature of 25-280 C favours the disease incidence. Management Remove and destroy the infected plant residues.  Deep summer ploughing Avoid seeds from infected crop Spray [email protected]% or Copper [email protected]% at the initiation of the disease. Four to five sprays may be given at 15 days interval. 7. Cercospora Leaf spot Cercospora gossypina Symptoms Usually the symptoms appear on lower leaves. At first, small water soaked lesions appear on upper surface of leaf. The spots enlarge and develop into circular or irregular spots with grayish white centre surrounded by brown margin. Many such spots coalesce to form big irregular patches. The centre of the spot may fall off leading to shot hole formation. The leaves may drop off. Disease cycle The pathogen survives in the infected plant debris as conidia. The secondary spread is mainly by air-borne conidia. Management  Remove and destroy the infected plant residues. Spray [email protected]% or Copper [email protected]% or [email protected]% or [email protected]% at the initiation of the disease. 8. RUST Phakopsora gossypii (Tropical rust), Puccinia cacabata (South western rust), Puccinia schedonnardi (Cotton rust-USA) Economic importance The disease usually occurs after September, i.e., at the end of the season. It is difficult to assess the loss due to bacterial blight. Symptoms Most common symptom is the appearance of bright yellow orange spots usually on under surface of the lower leaves. These pustules are surrounded by purple borders. Spots 55 become brown with age. Spots may appear on any of the above ground parts including bracts and bolls. Severe infections may cause defoliation and reduction in the size of the bolls. On stems and petioles these pustules are usually elongated and are not much raised. Pathogen Phakopsora uredia are yellowish brown, varying from 0.5 to 3.0 mm in diameter and are surrounded by purplish borders. Uredia first appear as oval, corky pustules and then become round. The pycnial and aecial stages of Puccinia occur on cotton, whereas uredial and telial stages occur on grasses, most of which are species of Bouteloua (Gramma grass). Disease cycle Pycnial pustules occur mostly on upper leaf surfaces of cotton and are bright yellow to orange in colour. Aecia of similar colour occur on lower leaves. The spores from cotton infect gramma grass (Bouteloua) producing elongate brownish spots (Uredial stage). The black telial stage appears on gramma grass later. The spores produced from telial stage during summer rains infect cotton to complete the cycle. Favourable Conditions High humidity and moderate temperatures are conducive for the disease. Management  Remove and destroy the infected gramma grass.  Spray [email protected]% prior to first spore showers from gramma grass. 9. Leaf Curl or Crumple of Cotton DISEASE: Leaf curl /crumple PATHOGEN: Cotton leaf curl geminivirus (CLCuV) and cotton leaf crumple geminivirus(CLCrV) HOSTS: Cotton Sympotms and Signs Cotton leaf curl geminivirus (CLCuV) causes a major disease of cotton in Asia and Africa. Leaves of infected cotton curl upward and bear leaf-like enations on the underside along with vein thickening. Plants infected early in the season are stunted and yield is reduced drastically. A CLCrV-infected cotton plant, showing downward curling of leaves and stunting of the upper portion of the plants. Foliar mosaic is also apparent in some leaves. Pre-disposing Factors  Both CLCrV and CLCuV infect dicotyledonous plants.  Are whitefly‐transmitted. Management Strategies  Grow resistant varieties like HHH-223, H-1117, H-1226, H-1236, H1098-I.  General sanitation Rogue out the infected plants periodically. Remove all the reservoir and weed hosts.  Spray 2-3 times with Monocrotophos @ 0.03% reduces the vector population.  Summary of general cotton disease control measures: Plant high- quality seed. Plant on a high bed and enhance drainage of field. Plant when the soil temperature 4 inches deep at 8:00 am is 60 degree F and when five days of warm weather are predicted. Plant only in fertile soil. Use an in furrow fungicide when planting cotton early in the season(mid April in Missouri), in clay soils and in poorly drained fields. Rotate cotton with wheat, soybean or corn crops. Plant varieties that have high yield potential and resistance to disease. Thank you

Use Quizgecko on...
Browser
Browser