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Old June 18, 2020   #1
rxkeith
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Default rotting tomato stems?????

after enduring a week of cold wet miserable weather, most of my tomatoes look like
they have decided to live, and are beginning to show new growth. two of my matina
disappeared, and the third one looked barely alive. i decided to yank it, and replace it
with a spare plant. when i dug it up, i discovered that the stem below the ground was
pretty much rotted away. there was some small root growth near the surface that was
keeping the small piece of healthy stem alive, so i potted it up to try to save it since
that was the last matina. a sun gold seems to have had the same problem.


i had suspected cut worms at first until i dug up the matina that was still alive. the stem
seemed to be in one piece, just brown, and rotting below the soil, and green from soil surface up.

any clues??






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Old June 18, 2020   #2
taboule
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Keith, how about the stem above ground, is it by any chance hollow and brown and rotten on the inside?
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Old June 18, 2020   #3
KarenO
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Sounds like either Alternaria or damping off.
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Old June 18, 2020   #4
zeuspaul
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I would cut it to where the stem is good and then root it in water and then pot it.
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Old June 18, 2020   #5
KarenO
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Quote:
Originally Posted by zeuspaul View Post
I would cut it to where the stem is good and then root it in water and then pot it.
Disagree with Trying to re-root a diseased plant Personally.
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Old June 18, 2020   #6
slugworth
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Your first sentence said it all.
I would do a Lazarus and try to save it.
I use a wet potting soil mix vs water
Put it in the recovery room indoors for a couple of weeks.
Under lights.
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Old June 18, 2020   #7
taboule
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+1 to what Karen said. Cut your losses.
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Old June 18, 2020   #8
brownrexx
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I had the same problem with 8 out of 17 of my mature tomato seedlings planted in the garden. I detailed this with photos on that "other" site that we can't talk about here and the consensus was damping off.

I did cut off my plants above the brown area and rooted them. I just replanted them in the garden yesterday.

I have never had this problem in the past but we did have a cold, wet May.

I also planted some store bought seedlings in the same holes where the bad plants were removed. We'll see what happens.
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Old June 18, 2020   #9
rxkeith
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the stem above ground feels solid.


i wouldn't have thought damping off could occur on outside transplants.
the previous weeks weather was pretty miserable for a tomato.

i have 40 other plants in ground. most are showing new growth. i could start
checking to see if any other plants are affected. disease vs environmental, i dunno.
this is a new thing for me.


thanks for the replies.






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Old June 19, 2020   #10
zipcode
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Cutting and rooting is no different than rooting suckers. It will certainly be faster than growing new plants if you don't have any. Probably damping off, if it's cold for longer periods after transplanting, it can happen.
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Old June 19, 2020   #11
brownrexx
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I wouldn't have thought about damping off either but I read online, and I can't find the link again, that it usually does not occur in mature plants because of secondary tissue in the stem but it definitely is possible.

My stems are brown below the soil line but hard and shriveled, not mushy and the stems above the brown part are green and healthy looking.

My stems narrow to a small skinny area in the middle of the brown part too. Do yours do that?

My Big Beef were so large that I could not bear to rip them out so I piled soil up around the stem above the brown part and they are growing and flowering but time will tell.

I am having the same problem in several of my Bell peppers.
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Old June 20, 2020   #12
rxkeith
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brownrexx


i had the thin strand of stem you describe.
the part near the surface was softer, and brown.
i did not dig out all the way to the roots, but did not
notice a hard dry section of stem. from what others have
said, it could have been damping off.
the living piece is potted up, and seems ok. it is a guess
if it will produce tomatoes. matina is an early variety, so maybe so.





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Old June 24, 2020   #13
b54red
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I have had this problem in the past when I planted deeper than the soil level on the seedling when in the original cup. I quit trying to plant deep after experiencing damping off on the buried stem many times over the years and have not had a problem since then.

I had this happen over and over again but it was sporadic and I couldn't figure out what was happening until I was in a hurry one day trying to finish up my plantings and didn't plant a bunch of tomatoes any deeper than the soil line on the seedling. So I had one bed of tomatoes planted deep and one bed planted shallow and over the next two weeks I noticed problems with nearly a third of the seedlings planted deep while the ones planted shallow had no problems. That ended deep planting for me and it has made my life easier.

Bill
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Old June 24, 2020   #14
brownrexx
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Quote:
Originally Posted by b54red View Post
I have had this problem in the past when I planted deeper than the soil level on the seedling when in the original cup. I quit trying to plant deep after experiencing damping off on the buried stem many times over the years and have not had a problem since then.

I had this happen over and over again but it was sporadic and I couldn't figure out what was happening until I was in a hurry one day trying to finish up my plantings and didn't plant a bunch of tomatoes any deeper than the soil line on the seedling. So I had one bed of tomatoes planted deep and one bed planted shallow and over the next two weeks I noticed problems with nearly a third of the seedlings planted deep while the ones planted shallow had no problems. That ended deep planting for me and it has made my life easier.

Bill
I have always buried deeper and never had a problem but last year I had this brown stem problem on just one plant. I never knew what caused it so I just moved on and this year I planted deeper again.

I have come to the same conclusion as Bill and I will no longer be planting my seedlings deeper than they were in their pots. The replacement plants were planted in the same holes but not deep so we'll see what happens.

The ones that I rooted and re-planted seem to have taken hold and are green and growing. I am hopeful that they will be OK.
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Old June 24, 2020   #15
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The only time I had a brown stem like that was on a plant that was planted right after taking off the lowest leaves and cotelydons. I could see where the rot had entered through one of those spots where a leaf was removed for deeper planting.
Since then I strip off anything that will be removed days before planting time so the wounds have time to heal and seal over before planting. No more brown stems.
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