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Tomato blight
Tomato blight







tomato blight

The Types of Tomato Blight And The Symptoms

  • More Tomato Growing Resources and Information.
  • Trim Lower Foliage to Protect the Tomato Plant.
  • Cover the Soil to Protect from Soil Splash.
  • Blight Resistant Tomatoes – The Varieties You Should Plant.
  • tomato blight

    The Types of Tomato Blight And The Symptoms.Looking for specific recommendations for your tomato pests and diseases? Contact our Plant Information Service for a personal diagnosis and recommendations. Want to plant disease-resistant varieties? Check out Cornell University's list of disease-resistant vegetable varieties. The most common ones are F (fusarium), V (verticillium), LB (late blight), TMV (tobacco mosaic virus), and N (nematodes). Seed catalogs often include letters after a tomato plant’s name to indicate disease resistance. Learning which varieties are disease resistant and disease tolerant can make for a better harvest next year. Others are disease tolerant-they become infected but continue to grow and produce fruit. Some tomato varieties have disease resistance-they can block infection. The disease does not overwinter in the soil, but infected plants should be removed and destroyed. If you suspect you have late blight, place the infected plant parts in a plastic zipped bag and bring it to the Garden’s Plant Information Service. The plants shed spores that blow onto other tomato plants and infect them as well. The fruits have large, rough brown spots. Infected plants have dark, water-soaked spots on the leaves. It’s caused when the night temperatures are in the 50s and the days are in the 70s with rain or heavy dew.

    tomato blight

    Late blight is one of the most devastating tomato diseases. Late blight of tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum) in a garden near Hilo, Hawaii, caused by Phyophthora infestans photo by Scot Nelson from Honolulu, Hawaii, via Wikimedia Commons. The best control and prevention tactics are to plant disease-resistant cultivars and to thoroughly clean up the vegetable garden in the fall. The virus is spread by insects, but gardeners can also spread it by touching an infected plant and then touching another plant. Twisted leaves mottled with light and dark green streaks is often caused by tobacco mosaic virus. If the leaves are yellow, but not wilting, and they’re mainly on the lower parts of the plant, remove the leaves and destroy them (don’t place them in the compost pile). If the yellowing quickly spreads upward and the plant is wilting, it’s best to remove and destroy it. Leaves that turn yellow could be the result of bacteria or fungus. Affected plants have leaves with small dark spots surrounded by a yellow halo and large numbers of lower leaves dropping. Tomato guru Craig LeHoullier (author of Epic Tomatoes) suggests using yellow sticky traps around the perimeter of the garden to catch the thrips.īacterial spot on tomatoes can be the result of wet conditions in spring, along with temperatures between 75 and 85 degrees Fahrenheit. Young leaves turn bronze with small brown speckles, and the plant is stunted. Tomato spotted wilt virus is caused by thrips-tiny flying insects that chew tomato flowers and transmit the virus. Tomato spotted wilt virus photo by Jason Brock, University of Georgia, Know your pests & diseases









    Tomato blight