Diseases of Geranium
PP011 (5/03R)
By Dr. Sharon M. Douglas
Department of Plant Pathology and Ecology
The Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station
123 Huntington Street
P. O. Box 1106
New Haven, CT 06504-1106
Telephone: (203) 974-8601 Fax: (203) 974-8502
Email: Sharon.Douglas@ct.gov
Geraniums continue to be one of the most popular bedding plants in the United States and in Connecticut. While there is still a demand for the traditional florist’s or zonal geraniums from cuttings (Pelargonium X hortorum), they are also joined by seed-grown hybrids, ivy geraniums (P. peltatum), Martha Washington or Regal geraniums (Pelargonium X domesticum), and scented and perennial geraniums (Geranium spp.) in the landscape.
Although over 45 different diseases have been described on geranium, most of them fortunately do not occur with any frequency. However, it is still important to be able to accurately identify disease problems when they do occur. Since the method of propagation used for geraniums has an impact on the types of diseases that are encountered, the diseases in this discussion are categorized on the basis of how the geraniums are propagated. Diseases are also organized by the type of causal agent or pathogen (e.g., fungal diseases, bacterial diseases). For each disease there is information on the causal agent, symptoms, and management strategies. For commercial growers, specific recommendations for pesticide applications can also be found in the current edition of the New England Greenhouse Floricultural Recommendations: A Management Guide for Insects, Diseases, Weeds, and Growth Regulators. It is very important to read the pesticide label thoroughly for information on dosage rates and safety precautions before each use.
DISEASES OF SEEDLING GERANIUMS:
The primary diseases encountered on seedling geraniums are Damping-Off, Pythium Root Rot, Rhizoctonia Root and Crown Rot, and Botrytis Leaf Blight, Crown Rot, and Flower Blight. Symptoms and management strategies for most of these diseases are similar to those for stock plants and cuttings and will be covered in the next section. The exception is Damping-Off, a problem that is unique to the germination stage of seed-propagated plants.
A. Damping-Off:
Causal Agents: Pythium, Rhizoctonia, and Botrytis.
Symptoms:--Pre-Emergence: recognized as many random "skips" or empty areas in the plug trays or flats since the fungi attack and kill the developing seedlings before they emerge from the propagation mix.
--Post-Emergence: seedlings topple over and often have a noticeable brown to black lesion at the soil line since the fungi attack and girdle the seedlings after they emerge from the mix; under wet, humid conditions, a gray or off-white, webby growth can be seen on the infected seedlings.
Disease Management:
a. practice good sanitation by using a clean house and equipment and a sterile, well-drained medium;
b. use fresh seed;
c. maintain media (75-78°F or 24-25°C) and air (74-77°F or 22-24°C) temperatures to promote rapid and even germination;
d. avoid fungicides applied as soil drenches since seedling geraniums can be very sensitive.
FUNGAL DISEASES OF STOCK PLANTS AND CUTTINGS:
A. Pythium Root Rot or Blackleg:
Causal Agent: Pythium spp.
Symptoms: usually more serious on cuttings during propagation, but can occur on plants of any age; brown, water-soaked lesions develop at the base of cuttings or at wounds; they become coal-black and watery; plants collapse when girdled.
Disease Management:
a. practice good sanitation by using a clean house and equipment and a sterile, well-drained medium;
b. use disease-free cuttings;
c. avoid overwatering (disease is favored by high moisture and low oxygen levels);
d. rogue and remove symptomatic plants;
e. maintain good insect control, especially fungus gnats and shore flies;
f. fungicides: among those registered for use are metalaxyl, mefonoxam, fosetyl-Al, etridiazole, and etridiazole plus thiophanate methyl; also registered is the biocontrol agent Trichoderma harzianum T-22.
B. Thielaviopsis Root Rot or Black Root Rot:
Causal Agent: Thielaviopsis basicola.
Symptoms: black, fairly dry lesions develop on the stem at or below the soil line on both cuttings and young plants; rooting of cuttings may not occur or may be delayed; leaves yellow, drop prematurely, and plants eventually collapse.
Disease Management:
a. practice good sanitation by using a clean house and equipment and a sterile, well-drained medium (especially when geraniums follow poinsettias);
b. use disease-free cuttings;
c. avoid overwatering (disease is favored by high moisture and low oxygen levels);
d. rogue and remove symptomatic plants;
e. fungicides: among those registered for use are etridiazole plus thiophanate methyl, thiophanate methyl, and thiophanate methyl plus iprodione.
C. Botrytis Blight (Stem, Leaf, and Flower Blight):
Causal Agent: Botrytis cinerea.
Symptoms: (Symptoms can develop at any stage of production and on any plant part. Under conditions of high moisture and humidity, any infected plant tissues and debris can develop the diagnostic fuzzy, gray growth characteristic of this fungus.)
--Leaves: symptoms vary from discrete spots or lesions to large, dead areas, often with concentric rings; V-shaped lesions can also develop and can be confused with those associated with Bacterial Blight; lesions often occur when spent flower petals fall onto the leaves.
--Cuttings and Stems: symptoms appear at the base of cuttings as light- to dark-brown lesions, which can result in complete basal rot; stubs on stock plants can develop brown lesions after cuttings are taken.
--Flowers: usually first evident as premature fading and drying of flowers; flowers turn brown and drop prematurely; during periods of high moisture and relative humidity, senescing flowers are covered with a gray, fuzzy mass.
Disease Management:
a. practice good sanitation by using a clean house and equipment and a sterile, well-drained medium;
b. use disease-free cuttings;
c. avoid overhead irrigation and water early in the day;
d. regulate relative humidity by venting and heating (HF);
e. use adequate plant spacing to promote good air circulation;
f. rogue and remove symptomatic plants and plant parts; remove spent flowers and senescing leaves (do not carry infected plant material through the house);
g. fungicides: among those registered for use are iprodione, thiophanate methyl, thiophanate methyl plus iprodione, mancozeb, chlorothalonil, fenhexamid, azoxystrobin, fludiononil, copper sulphate pentahydrate, and the biocontrol agent Trichoderma harzianum T-22. For resistance management, avoid making more than two consecutive applications with the same fungicide or same class of fungicide.
D. Alternaria Leaf Spot:
Causal Agent: Alternaria alternata.
Symptoms: usually first evident on the lower leaf surface as small, raised, water-soaked areas; these spots quickly develop into brown, zonate, sunken spots; these can be confused with the spots associated with Bacterial Blight, but the Alternaria spots tend to be larger in size; additionally, under conditions of high humidity, dark-brown, fuzzy spore masses of the fungus cover the Alternaria spots.
Disease Management:
a. practice good sanitation by using a clean house and equipment and a sterile, well-drained medium;
b. use disease-free cuttings;
c. avoid overhead irrigation;
d. rogue and remove symptomatic plants;
e. fungicides: among those registered for use are iprodione, thiophanate methyl plus iprodione, mancozeb, chlorothalonil, thiophanate methyl plus chlorothalonil, azoxystrobin, and fludiononil.
E. Leaf Rust:
Causal Agent: Puccinia pelargonii-zonalis.
Symptoms: small, yellow spots appear on the upper surface of the leaf and rust-colored pustules or circles develop in the spots on the underside of the leaf; pustules break open and release the rusty-colored spores for which this disease gets its name; when infection is severe, leaves yellow and drop prematurely; this disease is primarily a problem for zonal geraniums.
Disease Management:
a. practice good sanitation by using a clean house and equipment and a sterile, well-drained medium;
b. use disease-free cuttings;
c. avoid overhead irrigation and strong air currents;
d. rogue and remove symptomatic plants (BEFORE they sporulate, if possible);
e. fungicides: among those registered for use are triadimefon, mancozeb, thiophanate methyl plus mancozeb, chlorothalonil, oxycarboxin, azoxystrobin, and fenhexamid.
BACTERIAL DISEASES OF STOCK PLANTS AND CUTTINGS
A. Bacterial Blight (Bacterial Leaf Spot, Stem Rot or Wilt):
Causal Agent: Xanthomonas campestris pv. Pelargonii.
Symptoms:
Leaves: infected leaves typically develop two types of symptoms: small, discrete, water-soaked or brown spots and V- or pie-shaped, angular lesions; some leaves develop distinctly darkened veins and wilt at leaf margins.
Stems: when infection is systemic, the entire plant develops typical wilt symptoms, often first appearing in the lower leaves; leaves become flaccid and branches wilt and die back; stems can blacken and shrivel into a dry rot; infected cuttings fail to root and slowly rot from the base upward; stems become dull, black-brown and are drier than Pythium root rot; plants with systemic infection collapse and die; systemically-infected ivy geraniums do not wilt but develop symptoms that can be confused with nutritional or insect problems.
Disease Management:
1. Sanitation:
a. start with a clean house and equipment and a sterile, well-drained medium;
b. isolate stock plants from propagation area;
c. use disease-free cuttings;
d. keep geraniums from different suppliers separate;
e. separate seedling geraniums from cutting types;
f. avoid growing perennial geraniums (Geranium spp.) near Pelargonium spp.;
g. avoid placing ivies in hanging baskets above seedling or cutting geraniums;
h. use drip irrigation if possible (especially on stock plants);
i. rogue and remove symptomatic plants as soon as possible.
2. Education:
a. discuss the contagious nature of bacterial diseases;
b. require frequent hand-washing;
c. avoid unnecessary handling of plant material;
d. minimize traffic flow in house.
3. Chemical Control: among the compounds registered for use is copper sulphate pentahydrate.
B. Southern Bacterial Wilt:
Causal Agent: Ralstonia solanacearum (formerly called Pseudonomas solanacearum).
Symptoms: initial symptoms appear as a general wilting of lower leaves followed by yellowing and necrosis; V-shaped chlorotic or dead areas similar to those associated with Bacterial Blight can develop on flaccid leaves; a brown discoloration of the vascular system is sometimes visible; roots of infected plants are often brown or black; plants eventually collapse and die; no discrete leaf spots are associated with this disease.
Disease Management:
1. Sanitation:
a. start with a clean house and equipment and a sterile, well-drained medium;
b. isolate stock plants from propagation area;
c. use disease-free cuttings;
d. keep geraniums from different suppliers separate;
e. separate seedling geraniums from cutting types;
f. avoid placing ivies in hanging baskets above seedling or cutting geraniums (?);
g. use drip irrigation if possible (especially on stock plants);
h. rogue and remove symptomatic plants as soon as possible.
2. Education:
a. discuss the contagious nature of bacterial diseases;
b. require frequent hand-washing;
c. avoid unnecessary handling of plant material;
d. minimize traffic flow in house.
3. Chemical Control: chemical control is not effective in preventing infection since this pathogen generally infects through natural openings or wounds in the roots.
COMPARISON OF KEY FEATURES OF BACTERIAL BLIGHT AND SOUTHERN BACTERIAL WILT
BACTERIAL BLIGHT (XCP) |
SOUTHERN BACTERIAL WILT (RS) |
Host Range: |
Host Range: |
Pelargonium spp. |
Pelargonium spp. |
Symptoms: |
Symptoms: |
Leaf spots |
NO leaf spots |
Survival: |
Survival: |
Cannot survive for long periods of time outside of host. |
Can survive for several years in soil floors and in soil/sand benches without any available susceptible plant host tissue. |
Optimum Conditions for Symptom Expression: |
Optimum Conditions for Symptom Expression: |
70-85ºF (21-30ºC) |
75-100ºF (25-38ºC) |
VIRAL DISEASES OF STOCK PLANTS AND CUTTINGS:
A. Cucumber Mosaic Virus:
Causal Agent: Cucumber Mosaic Virus (CMV).
Symptoms: foliage appears mottled with light-green interveinal and dark-green veinal areas; infected plants are dwarfed, have small leaves, and shortened internodes; purple pigments are affected or rearranged; symptoms are most severe in winter and are often completely masked during long summer days.
Disease Management: see comprehensive discussion for viral diseases below.
B. Pelargonium Flower Break Virus:
Causal Agent: Pelargonium Flower Break Virus (PFBV).
Symptoms: the most diagnostic symptom is a white streaking on the backs of the petals (color-breaking); a subtle, chlorotic mottle or ring spot pattern can also develop on leaves; plant growth can be retarded.
Disease Management: see comprehensive discussion for viral diseases below.
C. Tomato Spotted Wilt and Impatiens Necrotic Spot Viruses:
Causal Agents: Tomato Spotted Wilt Virus (TSWV) and Impatiens Necrotic Spot Virus (INSV).
Symptoms: highly variable; range includes stunting, ring spots, sunken purple-brown lesions on leaves, stems, and petioles; symptoms vary with plant age and physiological condition, level of infestation, and timing.
Disease Management: see comprehensive discussion for viral diseases below.
Disease Management for Viral Diseases:
a. use disease-free, virus-indexed cuttings;
b. rogue and destroy symptomatic plants;
c. avoid unnecessary handling of plant material;
d. attention to weed control, when necessary;
e. attention to insect control, when necessary; thrips monitoring and management are very important (commercial growers can refer to the New England Greenhouse Floricultural Recommendations: A Management Guide for Insects, Diseases, Weeds, and Growth Regulators).
ABIOTIC DISEASES OF STOCK PLANTS AND CUTTINGS:
A. Oedema:
Causal Factor: considered to be a water imbalance that develops during periods of cool, cloudy weather or when the soil is moist and warm and the air is moist and cool.
Symptoms: first appear as chlorotic spots on the upper leaf surfaces; these develop into water-soaked blisters on the undersides of leaves that later become corky and rusty-brown in color; entire leaves may yellow, die, and drop off and can sometimes mimic Bacterial Blight; most serious on ivy geraniums.
Disease Management:
a. use a well-drained potting medium and maintain pH levels approximately 0.5 pH unit lower than for zonals;
b. maintain proper nutrient levels (increased N and Fe have been reported to reduce incidence);
c. avoid overwatering during cool, humid weather;
d. reduce humidity and space plants to promote good air circulation;
e. select cultivars less prone to oedema.
Summary
Geraniums continue to be one of the most popular bedding plants in the United States and in Connecticut. These popular plants are commonly affected by several physiological disorders and diseases in the landscape and in production. Among the common problems are oedema, Botrytis blight, and Pythium root rot. This fact sheet discusses the symptoms, causal factors, and methods to minimize their impact on geranium health.