Bacterial wilt

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Causal organism: Ralstonia solanacearum E. F. Sm.

 

Other names: Blast; Pseudomonas solanacearum (prior to 1992), Burkholdaria solanacearum (1992-1995)

 

Taxonomy

 

Kingdom

Eubacteria

Class

Proteobacteria

Order Gram-negative aerobic rods and cocci

Family

Pseudomonadaceae

 

Economic importance

 

Bacterial wilt can cause severe yield reduction, in the range 30 - 80%.  However, it is geographically restricted.

Geographical distribution

The causal organism, Ralstonia solanacearum, is globally distributed as a serious pathogen causing bacterial wilt in a wide range of crops.  However, the strain which causes bacterial wilt of sweetpotato has only been recorded in some parts of China.  It is the subject of quarantine regulations restricting sweetpotato and stock movement from the affected regions.

The sweetpotato strain of R. solanacearum also infects other crops such as potato, tomato, capsicum and peanut.  It is possible that this disease may spread by movement of other crop species.  For example, seed potatoes are commonly exported from China to Vietnam, and often carry bacterial wilt.  Any suspected case of bacterial wilt in areas exposed to Chinese seed materials should be reported to plant protection authorities.

Symptoms

Sprouts from infected mother roots become wilty and the base of the stem shows progressive degeneration:  initially the base of the stem becomes watersoaked before turning yellowish and brown. The vascular bundles turn brown, and this symptom extends upwards.  Infected sprouts usually fail to develop roots after transplanting.

Healthy sprouts or stem cuttings may become infected in the field.  As for sprouts, the base of the stem becomes watersoaked, then yellowish brown.  Brown streaks in the stem (in vascular tissue) may develop resembling Fusarium Wilt.  The plants may appear wilted, but may recover as their root system develops.  They may appear stunted and hungry, with older leaves turning yellow. 

Fibrous roots may have brown or watersoaked patches.  Storage roots may show no symptoms, or may develop yellowish brown longitudinal streaks.  In more severe infection, greyish watersoaked lesions may develop on the surface, and the storage root proceeds to decay with a distinctive odour. 

Morphology

The Pseudomonads are gram-negative, flagellated, aerobic bacteria.  Within Ralstonia solonacearum, the sweetpotato-infecting strain has been placed in Race 1, Group 2 on the basis of host range, being pathogenic on peanut and pepper but not on tobacco.  It is grouped in Biotype IV on the basis of physiological and biochemical tests.  Strains in this group are unable to metabolize lactose, maltose or cellobiose, and were sensitive to the antibiotic oleandomycin (see He et al, 1983).

Biology and ecology

The bacterium may be transferred either in soil or in plant material.  A field may become infested through infested planting material, or via irrigation water or composts containing infested plants. 

Development of the disease is favoured in warm humid weather.  It is also more severe on poorly drained clay loam soils than on sandy soils.  However, it does not survive well in flooded conditions, such as in rice paddy.  It prefers soils that are slightly acidic.

Host range

The sweetpotato strain of Ralstonia solanacearum has been found to infect a number of other solanaceous crops, icluding tomato, potato, eggplant and capsicum, as well as peanut.  Cereals are non-hosts and appropriate break crops in rotation with sweetpotato.

Management options

Rotation with non-host crops is the most important measure to reduce infestation on affected fields.  The pathogen may survive for over 3 years in upland fields, but is greatly reduced after 1 year in flooded paddy.

Planting material should be sourced from disease-free crops.

Cultivars differ in their susceptibility, although no immunity has been found.

Soil amendments (lime) to reduce soil acidity may help reduce the severity of disease.

Establishing the crop in the cooler months may reduce infection, which mosty occurs through wounded tissue immediately after transplanting.

In China, quarantine regulations restrict the movement of sweetpotato and livestock from infested areas.

References

Clark, C.A. and Moyer, J.W. 1988. Compendium of sweet potato diseases. APS Press. 74 p.

He, L.Y., Sequeira, L. and Kelman, A. 1983. Characteristics of strains of Pseudomonas solanacearum from China.  Plant Dis. 67:1357-1361.

Kersters, K., Ludwig, W., Vancanneyt, M., DeVos, P., Gillis, M. and Schleifer, K-H. 1996.  Recent changes in the classification of the pseudomonads: an overview.  Systematic and Applied Microbiology 19, 465-477.

Yabuuchi, E., Kosako, Y., Yano, I., Hotta, H. and Nishiuchi, Y. 1995.  Transfer of two Burkholdaria and an Alcaligenes species to Ralstonia gen. nov.:  proposal of Ralstonia pickettii (Ralston, Palleroni and Doudoroff 1973) comb. nov., Ralstonia solanacearum (Smith 1896) comb. nov. and Ralstonia eutropha (Davis 1969) comb. nov.  Microbiol. Immunol. 39, 897-904.

Zhen, G.B. and Fan, H.Z. 1962.  Identification of the pathogen causing bacterial wilt of sweet potato. J. Plant Prot. 1:243-253.

Contributed by: Jane O'Sullivan

Taxonomy

Economic importance

Geographical distribution

Symptoms

Morphology

Biology and ecology

Host range

Management

References

Bacterial wilt symptoms include wilting and darkening of vascular tissue in the stem and storage roots.