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Main symptoms

 


Fusarium solani
f. sp. cucurbitae parasitizes seedlings, plants and fruits at all stages of their development.

Diseased plants wither more or less at the hottest times of the day; these wilts are sometimes reversible. In the most severe cases, the plants end up drying out entirely.

The cause of this wilting is to be found at the level of the neck of the melon stems. A wet lesion has developed here, a rot that has progressively gained the lower part of the stem and the taproot, but also the upper part of the root system (figure 1). At the collar , the altered tissues are moist and show a dark to brownish tint. This lesion ends up encircling the rod for several centimeters (figure 2). The roots located in the same stratum of the soil are also affected (Figure 3). Their cortex turns yellow, brown and decomposes.

The portion of the stem near the soil surface is covered by a mycelium white to pinkish (Figure 4) on which the sporodochia and macroconidia of this Fusarium are formed .

The fruits are also attacked (figure 5): a wet and soft rot develops on the part in contact with the soil. The altered tissue also takes on a dark tint.

Last change : 04/30/21
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Figure 1
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Figure 2
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Figure 3
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Figure 4
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Figure 5