Randall C. Rowe
Sally A. Miller
Richard M. Riedel
Fusarium dry rot is an important postharvest disease of potato tubers that causes significant losses in storage and transit of both seed tubers and those for table consumption. It is also a major cause of seed-piece decay after planting.
Infected tubers usually develop a dry rot, but a moist rot may occur if secondary infections with soft-rot bacteria also are involved. Surfaces of infected tubers are sunken or wrinkled, and rotted tissues appear brown or gray to black. A white or pink mold is sometimes visible on tuber surfaces. When tubers are cut, internal cavities within rotted tissues may contain white, yellow or pink molds. In storage, blue, black, purple, gray, white, yellow, or pink spore masses may develop in these internal cavities. After low-temperature storage, internal tissues often will become firm and dry or even powdery.
Fusarium dry rot is caused by several species of the soilborne fungus Fusarium. These fungi are common in most soils where potatoes are grown and survive as resistant spores free in the soil or within decayed plant tissues. Although some infections may develop on tubers before harvest, most infections occur as the fungus enters tubers through harvest wounds. Small, brown lesions appear at wound sites 3-4 weeks after harvest and continue to enlarge during storage, taking several months to develop fully. The disease develops fairly rapidly at temperatures above 50 F, but lesions will cease enlarging below 40 F. The fungus is only dormant at these low temperatures, however, and will resume growth when tubers are warmed.
Fusarium seed-piece decay is really the same disease. Seed tubers may be infected prior to shipment. Decay during transit or storage often accounts for poor quality seed tubers. When these Fusarium fungi are present on seed pieces or in the soil, poor stands may result, especially if cut surfaces of seed pieces are not properly healed. Fusarium seed-piece decay begins as reddish-brown to black depressions on cut surfaces. These may expand to cover the entire seed piece and often result in a slimy rot when infection by secondary soft-rot bacteria follows.
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