Avocado dieback
Phytophthora cinnamomi
Worldwide. Asia, Africa, North, South, and Central America, the Caribbean, Europe, Oceania. It is recorded from Australia, Cook Islands, Fiji, Federated States of Micronesia, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea, and Samoa.
Avocado and many other fruit and nut trees (macadamia), fruits (pineapple), ornamentals (roses, azaleas), plus wild species in the US (American chestnut, Shortleaf pine, Fraser fir), in Australia (Banksia, Darwinia, Grevillea, and jarrah, Eucalyptus marginata), and Europe (native chestnut and cork oak). More than 800 species are susceptible.
Avocado dieback affects the small feeder roots of the tree. The pathogen causes a gradual decline of older trees or a quick death of those that are younger. The leaves become smaller than normal, green-yellow and brown at the tips; they may wilt during the heat of the day. Bare twigs and small branches appear as they fail to produce leaves, a symptom known as dieback (Photo 1). Fruit are small and progressively fewer as the disease advances. Dieback continues with ever more wilting and loss of leaves until the tree dies. In addition to the damage of the small roots, cankers may occur on the stem at or below soil level.
Phytophthora cinnamomi, the cause of avocado dieback, is not a fungus although much about its biology and life cycle is fungus-like. It belongs to the water moulds or oomycetes, which are related to algae. It has motile spores, called zoospores, produced within flask-shaped spores - sporangia (Diagram). The zoospores swim in the soil water and in this way find and infect the roots, until the whole root system is destroyed and the plant dies. During unfavourable conditions for Phytophthora cinnamomi, i.e., when there are no hosts to infect or soil conditions are too dry for spread, two types of thick-walled resting pores are formed: (i) 'chlamydospores', which are the more common, and (ii) 'oospores', which are produced when different strains mate. Both can survive for several years.
Temperature effects disease development. If the temperature is relatively low, i.e, less than 22°C, root growth slows and the disease is severe. If the temperature is relatively high, i.e., more than 27°C, avocado grows better than the water mould, and damage is less.
Phytophthora cinnamomi is the leading cause of damage to avocado trees, and is commonly known as "root rot" by avocado farmers. Damaged trees generally die or become unproductive within 3-5 years. The disease is worse in heavy clay soils with poor drainage.
In 1974, a very wet year in eastern Australia, 50% of all avocado trees developed root rot caused by Phytophthora cinnamomi. However, the situation today is different, as growers use phosphonate fungicides to help manage the disease.
Look for the foliage that becomes increasingly yellow and wilts during the hottest part of the day; look for the appearance of twig dieback. Dig up some of the roots, remove the soil by washing, and look for darkening or dead feeder roots.
QUARANTINE
Most countries legislate to prevent the movement of untreated plants across their borders; however, it is also important to restrict the movement of plants, plant parts and soil within countries to prevent the further spread of serious diseases, such as Phytophthora cinnamomi. Plants from nurseries, in particular, have the potential to spread diseases, and the following should be done:
CULTURAL CONTROL
Cultural control methods offer the best chance of reducing avocado dieback. It is important to remember that the disease spreads by movement of infected planting material, contaminated tools, and water running over infested areas, so do the following:
RESISTANT VARIETIES
Tolerant rootstocks are available. The variety, Duke 7, was the first commercial rootstock to be used worldwide, after its discovery in 1975. Others are available with better Phytophthora tolerance, and growers should enquire as to what is available locally. It is important that the rootstocks are from clonal plants, not seedlings.
CHEMICAL CONTROL
Apply fungicides containing potassium phosphonate as a spray or by injection. If trees are injected or sprayed, and there are no dieback symptoms, do it once a year when leaf flushes have greened and hardened, and root growth is strongest; this is at the end of autumn and the start of winter (May to June in the southern hemisphere). Only use foliar sprays if the trees have a full and healthy canopy of leaves. If that is not the case, use the trunk injection method. For trees showing dieback, a second injection should be applied in late spring/early summer. It is important to obtain advice from agriculture authorities on methods of application and timing.
AUTHOR Grahame Jackson
Information from Gerlach WWP (1988) Plant diseases of Western Samoa. Samoan German Crop Protection Project, Deutsche Gesellschaft für Technische Zusammenarbeit (GTZ) Gmbh, Germany. Photo 1 Diseases of fruit crops in Australia (2009). Editors, Tony Cooke, Denis Persley, Susan House. CSIRO Publishing. Diagram Rudman T (2005) Interim Phytophthora cinnamomi management guidelines. Nature Conservation Report 05/7, Biodiversity Conservation Branch, Department of Primary Industries, Water and Environment, Hobart.
Produced with support from the Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research under project PC/2010/090: Strengthening integrated crop management research in the Pacific Islands in support of sustainable intensification of high-value crop production, implemented by the University of Queensland and the Secretariat of the Pacific Community.
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