Pacific Pests, Pathogens & Weeds - Mini Fact Sheet Edition
Maize southern leaf blight (080)
Summary
- Worldwide distribution. In tropics and sub-tropics. On sorghum and grasses. Occasional outbreaks have been serious.
- Spots merge and cause leaves to dry and die. Spores on undersides of leaves spread in wind and rain splash.
- The blight survives in debris, and on “volunteers”.
- In the 1970s, in the US and elsewhere, a strain of the fungus (Race T), caused an epidemic, and resulted in ear rot, ear drop and lodging, and a large loss of yield. Race O is the common strain in the tropics and causes minor crop loss.
- Cultural control: resistant varieties; remove volunteers; provide mineral fertilizers or manures; wide spacing to reduce humidity; collect trash at harvest, compost or feed to livestock; plough-in remains; crop rotation.
- Chemical control: only use if resistant varieties are not available (main control method); use chlorothalonil or mancozeb. Apply when spots first appear.
Common Name
Southern leaf blight, southern corn leaf blight, southern leaf spot, maydis
leaf blight
Scientific Name
Cochliobolus heterostrophus; this is the name for the sexual stage; the asexual stage is known as Bipolaris maydis (previously it was Drechslera maydis and before that Helminthosporium maydis). There are different races.
AUTHORS Helen Tsatsia & Grahame Jackson
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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