Information and discussion regarding garden diseases, insects and other unwelcome critters.
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December 4, 2008 | #1 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: Brisbane, Australia
Posts: 114
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Please help me ID this disease, white leaves
diseased 005.jpg
diseased 007.jpg For the past 3 weeks this one Brown Cherry has shown very pale yellow new growth. A few days ago Ive also noticed some brown patches. The rest of the plant looks healthy, so do the other Brown Cherry plants on either side. The affected plant doesnt seem to have grown much though, you can see the other plants are a bit taller by now. Any idea what is going on here? |
December 4, 2008 | #2 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: Brisbane, Australia
Posts: 114
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Had upload problems, here is the other picture.
Lena |
December 5, 2008 | #3 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: PNW
Posts: 4,743
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So you were looking at 120-180 plants this year? On the off
chance that it is infectious, I would say that this one can go. Anyway, you can look through the pictures of mineral deficiences on these pages: http://4e.plantphys.net/article.php?ch=5&id=289 http://www.luminet.net/~wenonah/min-def/tomatoes.htm
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December 5, 2008 | #4 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: Medbury, New Zealand
Posts: 1,881
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I had a Black krim cutting do the same thing during the winter in my tunnel house, the plant came away come spring and is now a large plant with fruit days away from ripe,
What about cutting off the infected part off?? |
December 5, 2008 | #5 | |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: PNW
Posts: 4,743
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Quote:
mix them with water, and water the plant with that, too. The plant will react to the salicylic acid in the aspirin with an increased immune response. If it is a disease caused by some microorganism (fungi, bacteria, or virus), that may help the plant overcome it. If it is a mineral deficiency, that probably won't do anything, and new leaves will show the same symptoms. (If it is a microorganism caused disease for which the plant has no defenses at all, the aspirin probably will not be enough to let it recover.)
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December 6, 2008 | #6 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: Brisbane, Australia
Posts: 114
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Thankyou all for your responses. I cut the tops off the plant last night, now Ill just wait and see.
The plants on either side look healthy, so I dont think its mineral deficiancy. I feed my tomato-growing soil very well, withhorse manure, seaweed, blood and bone, comfrey, home made compost, fish emulsion, worm juice etc. The aspirin idea is a new one to me, I have alot of questions... can you please tell me some more about how and why it works before I ask them all? Im very interested. Thanks |
December 6, 2008 | #7 | |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: PNW
Posts: 4,743
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Quote:
pathways that become much more active when the plants are under stress from disease. (Plants naturally use salicylic acid to activate many of their disease defense mechanisms.) Adding it in the form of aspirin solutions allows the production of chemical defenses by a plant under attack from disease organisms to ramp up faster than it would if the plant had to produce all of its own salicylic acid. How much of it is deactivated by other soil organisms and chemicals before it can be absorbed by the roots and whether it can be absorbed through the foliage are as yet unanswered questions for me. I could post URLs found on the WWW relative to these questions, but they tend to be either technical biochemistry papers that examine specific chemical processes within plants or non-technical summaries without research results (like this explanation). From your description of how you prepare your soil, I would tend to doubt mineral deficiency as the cause, too (unless that specific plant has some kind of genetic defect that interferes with its ability to use particular nutrients). What made me think of that was the way that the damage tends to start at the stem end of the leaf rather than at the tip or at random locations somewhere in the middle of a leaf in your pictures. A few different mineral deficiences show that same characteristic.
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December 6, 2008 | #8 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: Brisbane, Australia
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Thankyou Dice! That makes sense now.
I think I rememer from highschool biology that ants contain alot of salicylic acid. I wonder what they do with it. Plant is still alive, making an axial bud which I will NOT pinch out! Strange how the symptoms didnt start until it was quite a few weeks old already. |
December 6, 2008 | #9 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: perth, western australia
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December 6, 2008 | #10 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: Brisbane, Australia
Posts: 114
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Ah ha ha ha ha ha!
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December 7, 2008 | #11 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: PNW
Posts: 4,743
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Here is one brief summary of some research results on salicylic
acid and plant immune systems: http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/84713.php
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December 7, 2008 | #12 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: Brisbane, Australia
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Interesting article, thanks.
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December 8, 2008 | #13 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: PNW
Posts: 4,743
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A lot of the news articles are like that one, focusing on the
potential for using the SABP2 gene in GMO modification of plants that don't already have it. GMO modification is not required for adding salicylic acid to a plant to have a benefit, though, as most plants where salicylic acid plays a large role in their immune response already have it (else they would have been more disease prone and probably gone nearly extinct already, at least for cultivated vegetable crop cultivars).
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December 8, 2008 | #14 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: Brisbane, Australia
Posts: 114
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Ive found another plant looking sick, the top half has curled up leaves covered in brown speckles. The one next to it is showing similar symptoms but less severe. Both are Polish Linguisa. Is that early blight?
If I use aspirin, how many mg should I use per plant? approx. |
December 9, 2008 | #15 | |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: PNW
Posts: 4,743
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Quote:
(Since aspirins come in different sizes, that is not real useful.) Another grower drops one aspirin in a planting hole at transplant time, on top of fishheads, eggshells, bonemeal, and 4-6-4 organic fertilizer. (This is for healthy plants before they show any symptoms of disease.) I crushed two 500mg aspirins, mixed them with water, and watered them in around the roots of a couple of plants with verticillium wilt this year. I did not notice any ill effects, but then the plants were already stressed, so it would have been hard to tell. On one plant, the stems that were covered with wilted leaves stayed that way, and I ended up cutting them off. The plant grew back new, healthy branches on the side where the wilt had not progressed, so that dose of aspirin was clearly not fatal or even severely toxic. On the other plant, all of the stems had wilted leaves, and it never recovered at all, although it stayed alive that way most of the summer. (The few fruits it eventually ripened were quite horrible tasting, so if I see any more like that I am pulling them rather than trying to save them.) Curled leaves on the top sounds like a virus to me. (We get some cucumber and potato viruses on tomato plants here in N. America that look like that.)
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