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How to Manage Pests
UC Pest Management Guidelines
Alfalfa
Stagonospora Crown and Root Rot
Pathogen: Stagonospora meliloti
(Reviewed 11/06,
updated 11/06)
In this Guideline:
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Symptoms of Stagonospora crown and root rot include rough and cracked bark
tissue on infected roots and crowns. The presence of red flecks in
diseased root tissue is a distinctive diagnostic symptom.
Fine red streaks also occur in the xylem (water-conducting tissue) in
the center of the root, below rotted portions of the crown. Affected crown
tissue is generally firm and dry, unless secondary organisms invade the tissue. The
pathogen also may infect leaves and
stems,
causing irregular, bleached lesions
with diffuse margins.
Infected leaves soon drop after lesions form.
Stagonospora crown and root rot is a cool season crown and root rot
disease. Spores of the pathogen form in black pycnidia and are spread by water
that splashes from infected leaves, stems, or plant debris. The fungus enters
the crown through stems and grows slowly downward into the taproot. Although
the infection can take 6 months to 2 years to kill a plant and above-ground
symptoms may be indistinct, the disease reduces plant vigor and yield. Leaves
and stems are generally infected during spring rains, but crown infections can
occur anytime. The disease is most damaging when alfalfa is not actively
growing.
To minimize the affects of Stagonospora crown and root rot, provide
optimum growing conditions for the alfalfa crop. Consider rotating out of
alfalfa for 2 years to eliminate the sources of inoculum within a field. For
more information, see CROP ROTATION. No resistant cultivars are available, but
germplasm with moderate resistance has been released.
UC IPM Pest Management Guidelines: Alfalfa
UC ANR Publication 3430
Diseases
R. M. Davis, Plant Pathology, UC Davis
C. A. Frate, UC Cooperative Extension, Tulare County
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