Introduction to Diseases of Cucurbits
- Cucurbits include cucumber, melon, watermelon, pumpkin, squash, and gourds.
- Major diseases: Downy mildew, Powdery mildew, Fusarium wilt, Angular leaf spot, Cucumber mosaic, and Tospovirus.
- Diseases caused by fungi, bacteria, and viruses.
- Effective management requires accurate diagnosis and integrated control strategies.
Downy Mildew – Pathogen and Symptoms
- Pathogen: Pseudoperonospora cubensis (oomycete fungus).
- Hosts: All major cucurbits.
- Symptoms: Small yellow, water-soaked lesions on upper leaf surface; lesions turn brown and necrotic.
- Severe infection causes leaf curling, death, and reduced fruit quality.
Downy Mildew – Disease Cycle and Management
- Survives on collateral hosts and plant debris.
- Spread by wind-borne sporangia and rain splash.
- Management: Remove weeds, avoid overhead irrigation, use resistant varieties.
- Fungicide sprays: Metalaxyl, chlorothalonil, or zineb at recommended intervals.
Powdery Mildew – Pathogen and Symptoms
- Pathogens: Erysiphe cichoracearum and Sphaerotheca fuliginea.
- Symptoms: White, powdery mycelium on both leaf surfaces, stems, and petioles.
- Leads to leaf yellowing, drying, premature defoliation, and fruit deformation.
Powdery Mildew – Disease Cycle and Management
- Overwinters as cleistothecia or on collateral hosts.
- Spread by wind-borne conidia.
- Management: Use resistant varieties, ensure good air circulation, apply fungicides (e.g., Calixin, Karathane).
Fusarium Wilt – Pathogen and Symptoms
- Pathogen: Fusarium oxysporum f.sp. niveum.
- Symptoms: Seedling damping-off, yellowing and wilting of leaves, vascular discoloration, stem lesions.
- Older plants may collapse suddenly, especially under stress.
Fusarium Wilt – Disease Cycle and Management
- Survives in soil as chlamydospores for years.
- Primary infection from soil; secondary spread by water and wind.
- Management: Seed treatment (Carboxin/Carbendazim), crop rotation, use resistant varieties, balanced fertilization, maintain soil pH 6.5–7.0.
Angular Leaf Spot – Pathogen and Symptoms
- Pathogen: Pseudomonas syringae pv. lachrymans (bacterium).
- Symptoms: Small, angular, water-soaked leaf spots; milky exudate under moist conditions.
- Lesions dry to form shot-holes; fruit spots cause internal decay and deformation.
Angular Leaf Spot – Disease Cycle and Management
- Seed-borne and survives in crop debris.
- Spread by irrigation water and handling wet plants.
- Management: Use pathogen-free seed, crop rotation, avoid overhead irrigation, apply bactericides (e.g., Streptomycin), destroy crop debris.
Cucumber Mosaic – Pathogen, Symptoms, and Spread
- Pathogen: Cucumber mosaic virus (CMV).
- Symptoms: Mosaic, leaf distortion, stunting, flower abnormalities, fruit deformation.
- Transmitted by aphids (non-persistent) and cucumber beetles; survives on weeds and alternate hosts.
Cucumber Mosaic – Management
- Rogue infected plants and eliminate weed hosts.
- Control aphid vectors with insecticides (e.g., monocrotophos, phosphamidon).
- Use resistant varieties where available.
Tospovirus (Tomato Spotted Wilt Virus) – Pathogen and Symptoms
- Pathogen: Tomato spotted wilt virus (TSWV), a tospovirus.
- Symptoms: Leaf bronzing, chlorotic spots, mosaic, die-back, stunting, fruit ring spots and necrosis.
- Transmitted by thrips (e.g., Frankliniella occidentalis, Thrips palmi).
Tospovirus – Management
- Use mesh screening and phytosanitary measures in nurseries.
- Avoid planting near thrips reservoirs (ornamentals, older crops).
- Control weeds and volunteer cucurbits.
- Implement early insecticide programs to manage thrips populations.
Summary: Integrated Disease Management in Cucurbits
- Combine cultural, chemical, and biological methods for effective disease control.
- Use resistant varieties and certified seeds.
- Practice crop rotation and field sanitation.
- Monitor regularly for early detection and timely intervention.