How to treat Fusarium wilt of strawberries?
Fusarium is a common fungal disease that affects a large number of garden crops. Strawberries are no exception and suffer from fungus no less than others. The insidiousness of the disease lies in the fact that it is impossible to completely eliminate the risk of its occurrence. Plants can become ill at almost any age and at any stage of their development.
Disease danger
Fusarium wilt (lat. Fusarium Oxysporum) is considered one of the most dangerous diseases. The disease affects the entire plant from the roots to the tips of the leaves, and since the focus of the disease is located in the underground part of the shoot, it can be almost impossible to recognize it at the initial stage. Fusarium is spread by weeds, many vegetable crops and contaminated soil. The parasitic fungus is highly viable and is able to infect the soil and plants for 25 years. Fusarium causes significant yield losses, which, with advanced forms of the disease and with its late recognition, can be 50%.
The first mention of laboratory studies of Fusarium refers to the twenties of the last century. It was then that in the countries of Western Europe and the United States for the first time drew attention to the emergence of a new disease. The first studies were carried out in relation to strawberries, the shoots of which died from damage to the root system by an unknown pathogen.The disease was called Lancashire and began to be carefully studied.
An analysis of the disease, taking into account the growing conditions of the plant and the course of the disease, showed that the disease is of a fungal nature and occurs due to high soil moisture. However, a little later, in 1935, experts in Germany and the United States independently concluded that the disease is viral in nature and is caused by fungi of the genus Fusarium or Phytophthora. Today, there is very little information about this insidious disease, and there are no specific recommendations for its treatment.
Moreover, many experts consider this disease to be extremely dangerous and require more detailed study.
The main danger of Fusarium is that not only the leaf cover of the plant is affected. The main stem wilts, mustache formation stops, flower stalks dry up and fall off, the root system is affected by rot, and as a result, the plant dies. However, the process of the harmful action of the fungus does not end there: the dead plant itself becomes a source of infection and infects other shoots through the soil.
Prerequisites for the occurrence and signs of the disease
Fusarium wilt begins with the root system. Initially, the fungus penetrates into small root processes and moves to larger roots, from which it enters the stem and leaves through a system of outlet vessels. The first signs of plant damage occur already when the root system is seriously affected by the fungus, and consist in the withering of the leaf cover of the lower tier. At the same time, the upper leaves are covered with light green and yellowish spots, and their edges become watery.
If plants growing in conditions of high humidity have undergone the disease, then, in addition to spotting, the leaves may become covered with white bloom and sag.
The wilting process occurs, as a rule, during the pouring of berries. This is due to the fact that it is during this period that the root system works for wear and tear, trying to provide the necessary substances for the pouring fruits. As a result, plant immunity during this period experiences significant stress and drops sharply under the invasion of the fungus. As a result, the plant becomes ill, and after a month and a half it dies.
If at this moment a transverse incision is made in the petiole, then it can be seen that the conducting vessels responsible for delivering the necessary nutrients to all organs of the plant have noticeably darkened and changed their structure. When the root is incised, there is also a change in the structure of the central cylinder and a change in its color to brown.
The main causes of fusarium include improper care of strawberries and gross violations of agricultural technology. This may be too close arrangement of bushes to each other, planting a crop on highly acidic and heavy clay soils with a high moisture content. In plants growing on such soils, there is a violation of the normal air exchange of the roots, because of which they begin to warm up and become the most vulnerable to fungal attacks. Among the causes of Fusarium wilt, there is also an excess of chlorine-containing fertilizers and the close location of strawberry plantations to busy highways or hazardous industrial enterprises.
Paradoxically, but lack of moisture also leads to the defeat of plants by fusarium. With poor watering, the root system dries up, and weakening and cracking of the root processes occurs. As a result, the plant becomes unprotected against the fungus and quickly becomes ill. And also the risk zone includes bushes that grow in too hot regions and areas with high humidity.
Fighting methods
Fusarium wilt of strawberries can be treated with the help of both folk remedies and modern antifungal drugs. When the first signs of the disease are found, one should not panic and destroy the entire plantation. The disease is focal in nature, and healthy plants can be tried to be saved. To do this, it is necessary to tear out and burn diseased specimens, and immediately apply preventive measures to healthy ones.
Spraying strawberry bushes with a solution of potassium permanganate with the addition of boric acid is considered an effective remedy. It also helps to sprinkle the beds with wood ash, previously mixed with powdered sulfur. Experienced gardeners recommend in such cases immediately carry out liming with chalk or dolomite flour. The fact is that the fungus does not tolerate soils with a neutral environment, and especially suffers from an excess of calcium in them.
Treatment with ready-made drugs is also quite effective. As a preventive treatment, as a rule, biological agents are used, among which the most common and well-proven are Agat-23 K and Gumat K. Good results are shown by the treatment of roots with a non-pathogenic isolate F. Oxysporum, developed and tested by scientists from Japan in 1991. If the disease nevertheless appeared, then at its initial stage, an effective method is the treatment of bushes with "Trichodermin" or "Phytodoctor".
In the event of a mass disease of strawberries, the use of chemicals is already recommended, the most effective of which are considered to be Fundazol and Benorad.
Good results are obtained by treating plantations with fungicides "Fitosporin", "Benefis" and "Sporobacterin", which, like previous preparations, can be applied both by spraying and through a drip irrigation system.
If all the measures taken to save the plant turned out to be useless, then the plantation is completely subject to destruction. Plants are pulled out along with the roots and burned, and the liberated area is treated with Nitrofen and dug up. It is possible to re-plant strawberries in this place only after 6 years.
It is often easier to prevent a disease than to spend energy and money on its treatment later. Therefore, for planting, you need to choose only healthy seed material, and plant it in disinfected soil, into which it is recommended to apply nitrate nitrogen in spring. If plants with Fusarium have already grown on the plantation, then it would be advisable to grow strawberry varieties such as Arosa, Bohemia, Sonata, Omskaya Early, Red Gauntlet and Talisman on it. These varieties are quite resistant to the fungus and are able to provide the owners of the strawberry plantation with a rich harvest.
For information on how to treat strawberry fusarium, see the following video.