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P h y t o p h t h o r a ....D i s e a s e s.... i n .....H o r t i c u l t u r a l ....C r o p s

 
 
Diseases caused by P.citrophthora  
 
Black pod
Black stripe
Brown rot
Collar rot
Crown canker
Foot rot
Fruit rot
Gummosis
Leaf blight
Leaf fall
Root rot
Seedling rot
Stem canker
Stem necrosis
Trunk canker
Twing blight

Gummosis

Symptoms
The first and most obvious symptom is defoliation, caused by coalescing cankers that girdle the stem or branches. Stem cankers are not always readily visible on the outer bark. If the bark is peeled away from the collar region, the wood appears watery grey, often with red streaks that intensify in colour upon exposure to air. In the advanced stages of the disease reddish fluid exudes from cankers that dries into a rusty deposit. The pink or light brown cortical tissue darkens to brown and blackish streaks can often be seen. Root rot, fruit rot, canker and gummosis of the trunk and branches can occur at once, causing a rapid death in 10-20 days, but a tree can survive for up to a year following infection before the leaves drop and the tree dies.
P.citrophthora Crop Infected
Citrus
Designed and Developed by: Alias E., Shaji A., M. Anandaraj and S.J. Eapen, Bioinformatics Centre, IISR, Calicut.