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US: New potato disease has major impact

A new potato disease in the United States, Dickeya blackleg, often just called Dickeya, has the potential to cause more severe losses than species of Pectobacterium (aka Erwinia) causing the type of blackleg that has been occurring. High temperatures (exceeding 77 F) are favorable for Dickeya, consequently the greatest losses have been in the southern portion of the northeast (especially the mid-Atlantic region) and further south. Total crop loss has occurred. 

Dickeya was severe in 2015 at least partly reflecting hotter weather than previous 2 years when the pathogen likely was present. This new disease is developing again in 2016. 


Symptoms of Dickeya blackleg in the photographs above were found the first week of June 2016 (starting May 31). 

Symptoms 
First symptom is poor emergence (skips in a production field) due to rotting seed.

Plants that emerge from contaminated seed wilt and typically have black stems extending upwards from rotting seed piece. 

Poor emergence: Dickeya Infected seed or poorly suberized seed may decay after planting, resulting in uneven stands (Courtesy: Amy Charkowski, UW)

Occasionally, especially late in the season, only internal stem tissue will be discolored. The fact stem symptoms start at the seed and progress upward illustrates that Dickeya dianthicola is in potato seed. 

Blackleg caused by Pectobacterium differs from Dickeya in that it starts on the outside of stem tissue, infects through wounds, and then moves downward as well as upward causing stem rot that is dark brown. 

Affected tissue typically has an offensive odor and is slimy. In contrast, plant tissue affected by Dickeya typically has an earthy smell; occasionally it has an offensive smell indicating soft rot bacteria are also present. 

Management 
Dickeya is a destructive pathogen that cannot be managed when present in production fields. There are currently no resistant varieties and no effective fungicides. 

This bacterium is not known to be able to survive in soil more than about two months, which is not long enough to be able to serve as a source of inoculum the following growing season.

Potato seed that is free of Dickeya is the best management practice for this disease. 

One challenge is that symptom development is limited by cool temperatures that are typical in seed producing areas: the pathogen can be present in a plant but cause no symptoms (wilt or black stem). 

Unfortunately there is not a reliable seed testing procedure identified yet. Infected seed can appear healthy. 

Dickeya is developing in crops established in 2016 with seed that tested negative with the dormant tuber test. 

Most affected seed was produced in Maine; some lots came from New Brunswick or Wisconsin.

For more information, please visit vegetablemdonline.ppath.cornell.edu.
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