Pineapple black rot, water blister of pineapple (soft rot), white leaf spot, butt rot
Ceratocystis paradoxa; it is also known by its asexual name, Chalara paradoxa or Thielaviopsis paradoxa.
Worldwide. Wherever pineapples are grown. Asia, Africa, North, South and Central America, the Caribbean, Europe, Oceania. It is recorded from Australia, Fiji, French Polynesia, New Caledonia, Papua New Guinea, Samoa, Solomon Islands, and Vanuatu.
Pineapple, cocoa (pod rot), coconut (stem bleeding), banana and plantain (black end or fruit rot), maize, mango, potato, sugarcane (pineapple disease, see Fact Sheet no. 218), sweetpotato (see Fact Sheet no. 232) and taro.
A wound fungus; Ceratocystis paradoxa causes leaf spots (white leaf spot), basal (butt) rots and fruit rots (black rot or water blister) on pineapple (Photos 1&2).
On pineapple leaves, a small brown spot develops usually where leaves rub together in the wind. The spots grow rapidly during wet weather, up to 200 mm, reaching the leaf tip. If the weather turns dry, a cream, almost white, papery spot develops which has brown margins.
On the fruits, soft, watery rots occur, at first with a brittle outer shell. Later, the skin, flesh and core break down and the fruit leaks through the shell. Sometimes, only the fruit shell remains with a few black fibres inside, and collapses under slight pressure. The rots are often associated with wounds.
On the butt (base or bottom) of the crowns, slips and suckers, a soft, grey to black rot occurs before or immediately after planting. This develops into a cavity at the base of the stems leaving only fibres. When butt rots are severe, plants fail to establish properly, remain stunted and the older leaves die, but the young leaves remain firmly attached. Infected plants can be easily broken off at ground level.
The fungus survives as thick walled resting spores, called 'chlamydospores', in soil and in the remains of the plants. Infection of pineapple is through wounds.
Wounds occur in the planting material when it is detached from the parent plant. Infections are particularly common when the crowns, slips and suckers are detached in wet weather and then stored in heaps. Infections, however, may not be seen at planting.
Similarly, fruits are infected through bruises, growth cracks or wounds made when they are detached. Disease development is worse if it is warm and wet at harvest. The name given to the disease, "water blister", is meant to describe the association of rain and symptoms.
The leaf spots are of no economic importance. Ceratocystis paradoxa causes severe loss of planting material. Also, it is the major postharvest disease of fruit for the fresh-fruit market. The rots occur during transport and storage when refrigeration is not available. Rots do not occur in the field. In India, it is estimated that the disease causes a loss of about 10%.
Look for sets of pineapple (crowns, slips, suckers) that fail to establish properly, wilt or die. Look for butt rots - soft back rots, with a cavity at the base of the stem. On fruits, look for black soft watery rots under a brittle skin. Look for long white or cream-coloured leaf rots that spread to the leaf tip.
CULTURAL CONTROL
After harvesting fruits:
After harvesting plant parts for propagation:
CHEMICAL CONTROL
Dip planting materials in the chemicals mentioned above, and use as directed on the products' labels.
AUTHOR Grahame Jackson
Information from Diseases of fruit crops in Australia (2009). Editors, Tony Cooke, Denis Persley, Susan House. CSIRO Publishing. Photo 1 Kohler F, Pellegrin F, Jackson G, McKenzie E (1997) Diseases of cultivated crops in Pacific Island countries. South Pacific Commission. Pirie Printers Pty Limited, Canberra, Australia. Photo 2 Anna L Snowdon. Pineapple: Disease and symptoms. Vikaspedia.
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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