This document discusses three diseases that affect cotton - Fusarium wilt, anthracnose, and bacterial blight. It provides details on the symptoms, causal pathogens, disease cycles and management strategies for each disease. Fusarium wilt causes wilting and death of seedlings. Anthracnose causes spotting of bolls and stems. Bacterial blight causes leaf spots and blackening of veins and stems. The pathogens are soil-borne fungi and bacteria and infect via seed or plant debris. Management involves seed treatment, crop rotation and fungicide/antibiotic sprays.
3. ďInitial symptoms on young seedlings are
yellowing and browning of cotyledons, followed
by brown ring on the petiole.
ďFinally wilting & drying of the seedling occurs.
ďSymptom at later stages includes loss of
turgidity, yellowing, drooping and wilting
starting from older leaves.
ďBrowning or blackening of vascular tissues
occur on the stem and spreads upwards and
downwards.
ďInfected plants appear stunted with fewer
bolls.
Symptom
8. Etiology of the Pathogen
â˘The hyphae are both inter and intra-cellular.
â˘The conidiophores are verticillately branched and develop
in sporodochia or sometimes directly on mycelium.
â˘Macroconidia are multicellular, light buff in mass, fusiform-
falcate, and curved inward at both ends, hyaline, 1 to 5
septate.
â˘Microconidia are 1-celled (6-10 x 2-3Âľm) or rarely 1-
septate (13-20 x 3-5Âľm), elliptical and scattered all over the
mycelium.
â˘Chlamydospores are mostly globular, dark coloured and
thick walled, terminal or intercalary and 7-13Âľm in
diameter.
â˘The fungus also produces a vivotoxin, Fusaric acid which is
partially responsible for wilting of the plants.
9. Favourable Conditions
â˘Soil temperature of 20-30ËC.
â˘Hot and dry periods followed by rains.
â˘Heavy black soils with an alkaline
reaction.
â˘Increased doses of nitrogen and
phosphatic fertilizers.
10. Disease cycle
ďThe fungus can survive in soil as saprophyte for
many years and chlamydospores act as resting
spores.
ďThe primary infection is mainly from dormant
hyphae and chlamydospores in the soil.
ďThe secondary spread is through conidia and
chlamydospores which are disseminated by wind
and irrigation water.
11. Management
⢠Treat the acid delinted seeds with Carboxin or
Carbendazim at 4 g/kg.
⢠Remove and burn the infected plant debris in the
soil after deep summer ploughing during June-July.
⢠Apply increased doses of potash with a balanced
dose of nitrogenous and phosphatic fertilizers.
⢠Apply heavy doses of farm yard manure or other
organic manures. Follow mixed cropping with non-
host plants.
⢠Grow disease resistant varieties of G.
hirsutum and G. barbadense like Varalakshmi, Vijay
Pratap, Jayadhar and Verum.
⢠Spot drench with Carbendazim 1g/litre.
13. ďThe pathogen infects the seedlings and
produces small reddish circular spots on the
cotyledons and primary leaves.
ďThe lesions develop on the collar region,
stem may be girdled, causing seedling to wilt
and die.
ďIn mature plants, the fungus attacks the
stem, leading to stem splitting and shredding
of bark.
Symptoms
14. ďThe most common symptom is boll spotting.
ďSmall water soaked, circular, reddish brown
depressed spots appear on the bolls.
ďThe lint is stained to yellow or brown,
becomes a solid brittle mass of fibres.
ďThe infected bolls cease to grow and burst
and dry up prematurely.
15. A. Star-shaped foliar necrosis;
B-C. Death of apical meristems;
D. Over sprouting of lateral buds (witches' brooms)
18. Pathogen
ďThe pathogen forms large number
of acervuli on the infected parts.
ďThe conidiophores are slightly curved, short,
and club shaped.
ďThe conidia are hyaline and falcate, borne
single on the conidiophores.
ďNumerous black coloured and thick walled
setae are also produced in acervulus.
19. Acervulus and Conidia
ďź The fungus only reproduces asexually by forming
conidia.
ďź The conidia develop on conidiophore, and both these
structures form the fruiting body of the fungus called
acervulus.
ďź Acervuli are saucer-shaped, flat and black velvety
structures.
ďź In each acervulus, alongwith condidia and
conidiophores, are present many long, branched and
septate bristles called setae.
ďź Conidiophores are aseptate and cut many unicellular,
falcate, hyaline conidia which on germination form the
new mycelium.
20. A.Acervulus;
B. Setae;
C. Conidia;
D. Germinating conidia;
E. Appressoria.
Colonies grayish, cottony
with pinkish orange
acervuli. Hyphae brown,
partly superficial, septate.
acervuli are 100 to 153 Âľm
in diameter. Setae olive or
dark brown,
22. Disease Cycle
ďThe pathogen survives as dormant mycelium
in the seed or as conidia on the Surface of
seeds for about a year.
ďThe pathogen also perpetuates on the rotten
bolls and other plant debris in the soil.
ďThe secondary spread is by air-borne conidia.
ďThe pathogen also survives in the weed hosts
viz., Aristolachia bractiata and Hibiscus
diversifolius.
23. Management
⢠Treat the delinted seeds with Carbendazim or
Carboxin or Thiram or Captan at 2g/kg.
⢠Remove and burn the infected plant debris and
bolls in the soil.
⢠Rogue out the weed hosts.
⢠Spray the crop at boll formation stage with
Mancozeb 2.0 kg or Copper oxychloride 2.5 kg or
Carbendazim 500g/ha.
25. Symptoms of the disease
ďThe bacterium attacks all stages from
seed to harvest.
ďUsually five common phases of
symptoms are noticed.
26. (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.
27. (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.
28. (iii) Vein blight or vein necrosis or black vein
The infection of veins cause blackening of
the veins and veinlets, gives a typical
âblightingâ 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.
29. (iv) Black arm or Bacterial blight
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 and
hang typically as dry black twig to give a
characteristic âblack armâ symptom.
30. (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 infection on
mature bolls lead to premature bursting. 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.
35. About bacterium pathogen
ďThe bacterium is a short, motile rod-
shaped with a single polar flagellum.
ďIt is Gram negative, non-spore forming
bacterium and measures 1.0-1.2 X 0.7-
0.9 Âľm.
36. Favorable Conditions
⢠Optimum soil temperature of 28ËC,
⢠High atmospheric temperature of 30-40ËC,
⢠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
favorable.
37. Disease Cycle
ďThe bacterium survives on infected, dried plant
debris in soil for several years.
ďThe bacterium is also seed-borne and remains in
the form of slimy mass on the fuzz of seed coat.
ďThe bacterium also attacks other hosts
like Jatropha curcus.
ďThe primary infection starts mainly from the seed-
borne bacterium.
ďThe secondary spread of the bacteria may be
through wind, wind blown rain splash, irrigation
water, insects and other implements.
38. Management
⢠Delint the cotton seeds with concentrated
sulphuric acid at 100ml/kg of seed.
⢠Treat the delinted seeds with carboxin or
oxycarboxin at 2 g/kg or soak the seeds in
1000 ppm Streptomycin sulphate overnight.
⢠Remove and destory the infected plant
debris. Rogue out the volunteer cotton
plants and weed hosts.
39. ⢠Follow crop rotation with non-host crops.
⢠Early thinning and early earthing up with
potash.
⢠Spray with Streptomycin sulphate +
Tetracycline mixture 100g along with Copper
oxychloride at 1.25 Kg/ha.