How to Manage Pests
UC Pest Management Guidelines
Alfalfa
Verticillium Wilt
Pathogen: Verticillium albo-atrum
(Reviewed 11/06,
updated 11/06)
In this Guideline:
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Verticillium wilt symptoms include yellowing of leaf tips, sometimes in a
V-shaped pattern. The edges of some apical leaflets will roll upward. As symptoms progress, leaves become
desiccated and sometimes reddish in color. They may defoliate, leaving behind a
stiff petiole. The infected stem does not wilt and remains green until all the
leaves are dead. Xylem tissue in
roots becomes brown in color.
Verticillium wilt of alfalfa is a warm season disease and can be
serious in susceptible varieties. Yields have been reduced by 50% in the second
year of production. This disease has been found in alfalfa growing in the
Mojave Desert and Riverside and San Bernardino counties. It has not yet been
identified in the Central Valley or Imperial, Palo Verde, or Coachella valleys
but has been found in a few coastal areas.
Verticillium
albo-atrum can be
carried internally and externally on alfalfa seed. The fungus also survives in
alfalfa hay and in animal manure.
The fungus penetrates alfalfa roots directly or through wounds. Spread within an alfalfa field can also
occur through infection of cut stems when swathing. The fungus has been
detected on sheep, which are trucked from one region to another to graze fields
in winter months.
The most practical control measure is to plant resistant varieties.
Cultivars resistant to Verticillium are listed in the
National Alfalfa Alliance Web site . In areas where the disease does not occur, care to prevent
importation of infected seed or plant materials is recommended.
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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