Pest, Disease and Weed Identification

Plant Disease Identification and Control

Preventing and controlling plant diseases is key to growing healthy plants. In this section, find information on plant disease identification and control, including rot, freeze damage, rust, blight, mold, scales, bacteria, viruses, fungus, wilt, mildew, gall, mites, moths, and cankers. You’ll also find tips on integrated pest management and herbicide summaries.

Types of Plant Diseases

Plant disease is “anything that prevents the plant from performing to its maximum potential.” We classify plant diseases as either abiotic or non-infectious diseases and biotic or infectious diseases.

Abiotic diseases are those caused by external conditions rather than living agents. These diseases are not infectious and include nutritional deficiencies, salt injury, ice, sun scorch, or soil compaction.

Biotic diseases are caused by living organisms, otherwise known as plant pathogens. These pathogens can spread from plant to plant and affect all parts of the plant, including roots, tubers, leaves, shoots, stems, crowns, fruit, and vascular tissue. Plant pathogens include fungi, fungal organisms, viruses, bacteria, phytoplasmas, viroids, parasitic higher plants, and nematodes.

Being able to quickly and accurately diagnose plant health gives you the best possible chance to solve any issues before losing the plant.

Field Crop and Forage Plant Diseases

A wide variety of diseases attack field and agronomic crops and forages. Successful disease control requires correct identification and knowledge of the cause and life cycle of the disease. It’s also essential to have control procedures available. There is plenty of information available for producers to increase their knowledge base, such as the Penn State Agronomy Guide. You can also turn to professional crop advisers or agronomy scouts for further guidance.

To make the right decisions about the controls to use, you need to have first-hand knowledge of the condition of the crops or forages in the field. Some common diseases to look for in corn include gray leaf spot and corn ear rot. Mycotoxins can cause moldy corn. Yield-limiting plant diseases do not become problematic until the reproductive stages of development, which means there is little benefit to early season fungicide applications.

Forage grasses are susceptible to a variety of leaf, stem, floral, and root diseases. Recent developments have led to improved management practices, such as using disease resistance species.

Small grains such as wheat may display symptoms of diseases such as head scab, black chaff, and Stagonospora glume. The quality and size of your yield depend on the severity of the disease.

There are some late-season diseases to look out for in soybean crops. Stem canker doesn’t show symptoms until well into the reproductive stages of growth. Soybean sudden death syndrome has pretty striking symptoms, but other diseases, such as brown stem rot or injury from chemicals can mimic it.

Fruit and Vegetable Diseases

As with all other types of crops, early identification is key for successful management and control of fruit and vegetable diseases. There’s plenty of help available for seasoned and beginning vegetable farmers, whether you’re growing brassicas, potatoes, or any other fruit or vegetable crop.

Regular and proper scouting techniques allow you to note significant changes and symptom development early enough to keep vegetable and tree fruit diseases at bay. It can help manage pre- and post-harvest fruit rots, spot the symptoms of pear blister mite and pear rust mite, as well as many other vegetable and tree fruit diseases.

Timing is key with any disease management plan and typically varies depending on the disease you want to control. You must also take product efficacy and disease development into account. There are, however, things a farmer can do to delay resistance to fungicides in vegetable and fruit crops.

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  1. Field day participants discuss disease management with Farmer Anton Shannon, at Good Work Farm.
    Articles
    Start Farming: Developing Your Disease Management Plan
    By Tianna DuPont
    A field day at one of Penn State Extension's Models for the Future sites reviewed the importance of a comprehensive disease management plan for your operation.
  2. Photo: P. Landschoot, Penn State
    Articles
    SDHI Fungicides for Turfgrass Diseases
    By Peter Landschoot, Ph.D.
    Turfgrass disease prevention and control programs on golf courses often include fungicide applications.
  3. Si cultiva cucurbitáceas en un contenedor (izquierda) elija variedades de pepinos (centro) y calabazas (derecha) cultivadas para espacios pequeños y que tengan hábitos de crecimiento reducido.
    Articles
    Pepinos, Calabacines y Calabazas Cultivadas en Contenedores
    By Tom Butzler, Maria Gorgo-Gourovitch, Thomas Maloney, Darryl Dressler
    Este artículo, en combinación con los consejos incluidos en la publicación 'Recomendaciones generales para el cultivo de hortalizas en contenedores', le ayudará a cultivar hermosos pepinos, calabacines y calabazas.
  4. Photo by Kathy Demchak.
    Articles
    Strawberry Disease - Angular Leaf Spot
    By Kathy Demchak
    Angular leaf spot, caused by the bacterium Xanthomonas fragariae, is frequently problematic in strawberry plantings.
  5. Best Practices For Early Management of Harmful Microalgae During Cannabis Cloning
    Articles
    Best Practices For Early Management of Harmful Microalgae During Cannabis Cloning
    By John E. Kaminski, Ph.D., Alyssa Collins, Ph.D., Louis Bengyella, Ph.D., Iris A Costar
    Green algae are known to slow gas exchange between plants and their immediate environment and thus, slow root growth and establishment of cannabis clones when transplanted.
  6. Turfgrass Disease Clinic
    Turfgrass Disease Clinic
    The mission of the Turfgrass Disease Clinic is to provide assistance to the turfgrass industry in Pennsylvania in maintaining high quality turf through integrated health management practices.
  7. Plant Disease Clinic
    Plant Disease Clinic
    Provides clinical diagnoses of plant diseases for 2,000+ samples submitted annually by agricultural producers, urban gardeners, and homeowners.
  8. Stone Fruit Disease Control Toolbox - Fungicide and Antibiotic Efficacy
    Articles
    Stone Fruit Disease Control Toolbox - Fungicide and Antibiotic Efficacy
    Fungicides should be selected based on stone fruit diseases to be controlled and product efficacy for each. Growers can prevent resistance to fungicides by alternating chemicals by FRAC code group.
  9. Apple Disease Control Toolbox - Fungicide and Antibiotic Efficacy
    Articles
    Apple Disease Control Toolbox - Fungicide and Antibiotic Efficacy
    By Kari A. Peter, Ph.D.
    Fungicides should be selected based on apple diseases to be controlled and product efficacy for each. Growers can prevent resistance to fungicides by alternating chemicals by FRAC code group.
  10. Apple Disease Control Toolbox - Fungicide Timing
    Articles
    Apple Disease Control Toolbox - Fungicide Timing
    By Kari A. Peter, Ph.D.
    Timing of a fungicide application in relation to disease development is important for achieving the best results.
  11. Japanese Knotweed
    Articles
    Japanese Knotweed
    By Art Gover, David R. Jackson, Sarah Wurzbacher, Skylure Templeton
    Japanese knotweed (Fallopia japonica) is an invasive perennial and noxious weed in PA. This article will assist with identification and provides recommendations for control, including a management calendar and treatment and timing table.
  12. Japanese Barberry
    Articles
    Japanese Barberry
    By Art Gover, David R. Jackson, Sarah Wurzbacher, Skylure Templeton
    Japanese barberry (Berberis thunbergii) is an invasive shrub used in plantings. This article displays images to assist with identification and provides recommendations for control, including a management calendar and treatment and timing table.
  13. Tree Fruit Disease Toolbox - Fungicide Resistance Management
    Articles
    Tree Fruit Disease Toolbox - Fungicide Resistance Management
    By Kari A. Peter, Ph.D.
    Resistance has sometimes resulted in pest-management-program failures. Below are presented tactics to help delay resistance to fungicides.
  14. Source: Mary Ann Hansen, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, Bugwood.org
    Articles
    Apple Disease - Blossom End Rot
    By Kari A. Peter, Ph.D.
    Blossom end rot of apple, is caused by various fungi (Sclerotinia sclerotiorum, Botrytis cinerea, Botrysphaeria obtusa) just before or during petal fall.
  15. Scales on new growth and fruit produce deep purplish-red coloration in the tissue. Photo by G. Krawczyk.
    Articles
    Tree Fruit Insect Pest - San Jose Scale
    By Grzegorz (Greg) Krawczyk, Ph.D.
    The San Jose scale, Quadraspidiotus perniciosus, is a pest of fruit trees, but it attacks many other trees as well as shrubs.
  16. Source: Steve L. Brown, University of Georgia, Bugwood.org
    Articles
    Tree Fruit Insect Pest - Potato Leafhopper
    By Dennis Calvin
    Potato leafhopper, Empoasca fabae, is a migratory pest of many crops. It feeds on leaves of rapidly growing apple terminals and may aid in spread of fire blight.
  17. Apple rust mites. Photo: David Biddinger
    Articles
    Tree Fruit Mite Pest - Apple Rust Mite
    By Grzegorz (Greg) Krawczyk, Ph.D.
    Apple rust mite, Aculus schlechtendali, is commonly found, but is rarely an important pest of apple in Pennsylvania.
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