Confirmation in Suffolk County: Growers Urged to be on the Lookout for Disease
New York State Agriculture Commissioner Darrel
J. Aubertine today alerted home gardeners and commercial growers of the
potential introduction of late blight this growing season, as it has been
confirmed in Suffolk County.
Late blight is a plant disease that spreads
rapidly from plant to plant in wet, cool weather that causes tomato and potato
plants, primarily, to wilt and die.
“To help protect the State’s potato and tomato
crops, the Department has once again initiated a concerted strategy to enhance
the State’s detection and eradication efforts for late blight this growing
season,” the Commissioner said.
“While the recent hot and dry weather patterns
should reduce the spread of this plant disease, commercial growers and
gardeners should always be on the lookout and take the recommended precautions
to protect their plants.”
The New York State Department of Agriculture and
Markets has trained horticultural inspectors that are currently surveying
plants, in particular transplant tomatoes, at the retail level and in
commercial greenhouses.
Collectively, they have inspected more than
1,600,000 tomato plants and seen no signs of late blight detected in
tomatoes.
In addition, the Department continues to work
with Cornell Cooperative Extension to conduct outreach and follow up in the
field with both growers and gardeners.
As a result of those efforts, three cases of late
blight in field potatoes have been confirmed in Suffolk County.
Late blight is a plant disease that mainly
attacks potatoes and tomatoes, although it can sometimes be found on other
crops, weeds and ornamentals, such as petunias, nightshades, and
tomatillos.
Late blight was a factor in the Irish potato
famine in the 1840’s, during which millions of people in Ireland starved or
were forced to emigrate.
Late blight is caused by an oomycete pathogen
that can produce millions of spores from infected plants, spreading readily
with wet weather and high humidity.
Spores travel through the air, land on plants,
and if the weather is sufficiently wet, cause new infections. Once infected,
plants may wilt and die within three days.
New York has battled strains of late blight in
2009 and 2011 that were particularly devastating to tomatoes. Presence of
the disease, combined with wet weather those years led to a quick and
devastating spread of the disease.
Organic growers struggled with the disease as
they have few approved control measures to use, and commercial tomato growers
were challenged to apply crop fungicides in time to prevent the outbreak.
Visit http://vegetablemdonline.ppath.cornell.edu/factsheets/Potato_LateBlt.htm for more information about identifying late blight and how to control it.
Image courtesy of http://free-extras.com.
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