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February 22, 2007
 
Prevention key to vegetable garden disease control
 
You can't just spray, but you don't have to give up, either.
 
Most vegetables are susceptible to many diseases in Georgia, says a University of Georgia Cooperative Extension expert. But home gardeners can do a few things to keep these diseases away and help ensure a bountiful harvest
Complete Story
Photo: David Langston/UGA CAES
Diseases, like this Fusarium wilt on tomatoes, can snatch a bountiful harvest away from even the most seasoned gardeners. Using varieties that are resistant to plant diseases is the best way to avoid these losses. The types of disease resistance for each variety are noted on the seed container or in a seed catalog.

By Brad Haire
University of Georgia

Most vegetables are susceptible to many diseases in Georgia, says a University of Georgia Cooperative Extension expert. But home gardeners can do a few things to keep these diseases away and help ensure a bountiful harvest.

Volume XXXII
Number 1
Page 8

Plant diseases are caused by four main types of organisms: fungi, bacteria, nematodes and viruses, said David Langston, a UGA Extension vegetable plant pathologist.

Vegetable plants are more susceptible to diseases caused by fungi and bacteria when conditions are wet and warm. Scout your garden regularly.

When the garden is dry, nematode damage is more evident. You can test your soil for nematodes by submitting a sample through your county UGA Extension office.

Viral diseases can show up anytime, Langston said.

Many plant diseases can be on or within the seeds. "Seeds should not be saved from year to year," he said. "This is important to prevent a number of diseases."

Buy seeds from a reputable dealer. You can't distinguish healthy seeds from diseased ones. Make sure you follow directions on when and how to plant them.

Think 'resistant'

Using varieties that are resistant to plant diseases is the best way to avoid disease losses. The types of disease resistance for each variety are noted on the seed container or in a seed catalog.

Don't plant your garden near or beneath trees. The shade will reduce the drying of plant foliage after rain and increase the chances of diseases. Besides, vegetables like a lot of sunlight, and the trees will compete for vital nutrients.

Crop rotation is important. If you keep planting the same vegetables in the same spot year after year, you're asking for soil-borne disease problems.

Grow the same or closely related vegetable plants in the same soil only once every three to five years, Langston said. This practice starves out most pathogens that cause stem and leaf diseases.

Rotate this

Vegetable families include:

  • Alliaceae (chives, garlic, leeks and onions).
  • Apiaceae (carrots).
  • Asteraceae
  • (lettuce).
  • Brassicaceae (broccoli, Brussels sprouts, cabbage, cauliflower, collards, mustard, radishes, rutabagas and turnips).
  • Chenopodiaceae (spinach)
  • Cucurbitaceae (cantaloupes, cucumbers, honeydew melons, pumpkins, squash and watermelons).
  • Fabaceae (all beans, English peas and Southern peas).
  • Malvaceae (okra).
  • Poaceae (corn).
  • Solanaceae (eggplant, peppers, potatoes and tomatoes).
"Trap crops" can reduce viral diseases carried by small insects. Plant a few rows of a crop like rye or corn around your main garden. This will tempt insects to feed there first, reducing the risk of diseases some small insects are known to carry.

Water carefullly

When you water the garden, don't splash soil onto plant foliage. If possible, run the water between the rows. Use a mulch layer of straw, bark, shredded paper or plastic to keep soil from splashing onto plants and keep fruit from touching bare ground.

If you use tobacco, wash your hands thoroughly before handling plants. This will prevent the spread of tobacco mosaic virus, which can infect many kinds of vegetables, particularly tomatoes and peppers.

After harvest, remove and destroy all plants from the garden and sanitize your garden equipment. This will reduce the overwintering of disease-causing organisms.

(Brad Haire is a news editor with the University of Georgia College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences.)

 
 
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AUTHOR
Brad Haire
College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences
229-386-3800

(Brad Haire is a news editor with the University of Georgia College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences.)

 
SOURCE
David Langston
229-386-7495
 
 
 
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Graphics included in this story:
  TomatoFusWilt.jpg
 

 


 
 
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