fungus Weak parasitic opportunistic reported in many countries distributed in tropical to subtropical, even equatorial zones: Asia (China, India, Indonesia, Korea, Pakistan), Africa (Benin, Congo, Ghana, Guinea, Kenya, Malawi, Mauritania, Nigeria , Senegal, Egypt), several states in the United States, Central America and the Caribbean, South America (Brazil, Paraguay, Colombia, Peru, Venezuela) and Oceania (Australia, French Polynesia, New Caledonia).
Seems to occupy the place of Botrytis cinerea in tropical areas and to adopt a comparable parasitic behavior on vegetables; B. cinerea being occasionally observed at altitude in certain tropical countries.
Extremely polyphagous, capable of developing on a wide variety of hosts: many Cucurbitaceae (watermelon, zucchini, various squash, pumpkin, vegetable sponge, etc.); chili, eggplant, radish, cauliflower, bean, pea, spinach, potato, but also yam, sweet potato, okra, and various other plants, whether or not cultivated, such as amaranth, cowpea, l hibiscus, fig, cotton, papaya, kilometer bean (V igna sinensis ), mung bean ( Vigna radiata ), sorghum, cassava, etc.
Observed in the open field as well as under shelter or its damage can sometimes be considerable.
Organs attacked : leaves, flowers, fruits, stems
Symptoms :
Colonization of senescent petals and destruction of whole flowers which rot, turn brown or even blacken.
Abortion of young fruits; wet lesions on fruits (starting from senescent sepals or remnants of floral parts, wounds) rapidly evolving into wet and soft rot (figures 1 and 2 - eggplant) (figures 6 and 7 - chili pepper).
Moist, dark green to brown lesions on stems (particularly of the cortex) causing leaf wilting and drying out.
Wet alterations on leaflets and on leaves evolving into rotting (figures 3 to 5 - eggplant) (figure 8 - chilli pepper).
Conservation : High saprophytic aptitudes, important enzymatic arsenal allowing it to degrade a large number of substrates, plant debris, and to be maintained in the soil from one year to the next. Its chlamydospores and zygospores in particular allow it to survive.
Infection : settles on plants in particular from senescent floral organs (withered corollas, stamens, pistils), but also via various wounds (sunburn, apical necrosis, sag, insect bites, various shocks, etc.) , and in the zone of contact of the organs with the ground. Subsequently, it actively and rapidly invades the tissues.
Sporulation : it is rapid on rotten organs with the production of sporocysts carrying numerous spores (figures 1 to 4).
Spread : The spores are dispersed by wind and drafts, rain, and splash from rains and sprinkler irrigation. Note that pollinating insects in particular can transmit spores from one flower to another.
Favorable conditions : likes hot, humid climates and thrives particularly well at temperatures of 25 ° C and above. Symptoms near or on the ground are more vulnerable.
Protection
Drain the soil of the plot well to avoid the formation of puddles.
Orient the rows of planting in the direction of the prevailing winds so that the plant cover is well ventilated.
Put in place a mulch to prevent the fruits from coming into contact with the soil.
Manage irrigations as well as possible so that they are regular and never excessive.
Avoid sprinkling irrigations, otherwise perform them at the beginning or during the day to allow the plants to dry up quickly.
Control other diseases and pests because they are the cause of wounds, tissue necrosis conducive to the installation of C. cucurbitarum .
Under shelters, it is imperative to reduce the ambient humidity by ventilating them as much as possible.
Eliminate flowers, during and at the end of cultivation fruits and other more or less rotten diseased organs , do not leave them on the ground.
Avoid injuring the fruits and harvesting them at advanced maturity.