Reports on Plant Diseases |
RPD No. 907 -
Stewart's Wilt and Blight of Sweet Corn |
June
1996 |
[ Symptoms
] [ Disease Cycle ] [ Control
] [ Resistant Hybrids ]
[ Sweet
Corn Disease Nursery Website ]
Stewart's wilt and seedling blight of sweet corn, is caused by the bacterium
Erwinia stewartii. The disease commonly occurs from southern
New England to the Middle Atlantic states and west to Kansas and the Dakotas.
Scattered outbreaks occur outside this general area. Bacterial wilt is
more prevalent in southern regions of the Corn Belt. It has not become
established in areas with dry climates, nor in areas without corn
flea beetles (Chaetocnema pulicaria), the vector of the bacterium.
It is much more severe on susceptible sweet corn and popcorn hybrids than
on most field corn hybrids.
Symptoms
The bacterial wilt organism infects sweet corn plants at any stage of
growth. Infected seedlings may die prematurely. The disease is usually
most conspicuous and serious in young plants under two feet tall. In seedlings,
the bacterium often spreads systemically throughout plants of susceptible
hybrids.
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Click
on image for larger version
Figure 1. Seedling
Wilt Phase |
Click
on image for larger version
Figure 2. Foliar
symptoms
on mature plants |
Symptoms are limited to localized areas of leaves in hybrids with moderate
levels of resistance. The older leaves of young plants develop narrow
yellowish streaks, which later turn brown (Figure 1). Several streaks
on a leaf cause it to shrivel, and die. These symptoms may be confused
with symptoms of frost damage, drought, nutrient disorders, or insect
injury.
Symptoms on more mature plants commonly appear as irregular, pale green
to yellowish streaks with wavy margins that sometimes extend the length
of the leaf blade (Figure 2). The streaks can often be traced back to
flea beetle wounds, usually on the top half of the leaf. The streaks
later become dry and brown. On extremely susceptible hybrids, plants
are stunted and die prematurely. In older plants, necrotic tissue resulting
from Stewart's wilt may resemble severe symptoms caused by multible
infections by the northern leaf blight pathogen, Exserohilum turcicum.
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When a wilted or dying plant with a normal green stalk is cut through and squeezed,
small droplets of yellowish bacterial ooze appear on the cut ends of the
vascular bundles. Cavities may develop within the lower stalk of a severely
infected plant (Figure 3). The bacteria in such plants are systemic and
may pass through the cob into the kernels.
On very susceptible hybrids a yellow, slimy ooze infrequently collects
on the surface of the inner ear husks or covers the kernels. Other kernels
may have grayish spots (lesions) with dark margins or they may be deformed
and shrunken.
|
Click
on image for larger version
Figure 3. Water
soaking
and rotting symptoms
in stem tissues
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Losses of up to 90 percent can occur in Illinois on very susceptible hybrids
following mild winters, especially in early plantings in the southern half of
the state. Yield losses are influenced by the number of infective flea beetles
in the field, the relative susceptibility of the hybrid to Stewart's wilt, and
the growth stage of the plant at the time of infection. Susceptible hybrids
infected at the 3 to 5 leaf stage will have greater yield reductions than will
the same hybrids infected at later growth stages (Table1).
PERCENT REDUCTIONS IN YIELD
|
HYBRID REACTION |
3 to 5 Leaf Stage |
5 to 7 Leaf Stage |
7 to 9 Leaf Stage |
Resistant |
0 |
0 |
0 |
Moderately Resistant |
0 - 30 |
0 |
0 |
Moderately Susceptible |
10 - 40 |
0 - 10 |
0 |
Susceptible |
40 - 100 |
15 - 35 |
3 - 10 |
Table 1. Effects
of host resistance and growth stage on yield reductions due to Stewart's
wilt. |
Dent corn is generally much more resistant to this disease than is sweet corn.
The characteristic symptoms on the leaves are long, irregular, pale green streaks
that turn yellow and finally straw- colored. This phase, known as leaf blight,
is often prevalent after tasseling.
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Disease Cycle
The bacterium causing Stewart's disease overwinters almost exclusively in the
digestive tracts of hibernating, adult corn flea beetles. In areas where wilt
was severe the previous summer, approximately 20 percent of the surviving beetles
in the spring are contaminated with the bacterium. These insects migrate and
are carried by air currents 20 miles or more. Young corn plants become infected
by the feeding of the flea beetle. Non-infested flea beetles feed on infected
plants and then carry the wilt bacterium to healthy plants. As the summer progresses,
new broods of flea beetles become infested, greatly increasing the number of
contaminated insects. The flea beetles carry and transmit the bacterium as long
as they live.
The number of flea beetles emerging in spring from hibernation depends on the
severity of winter temperatures. Low temperatures are unfavorable for beetle
survival. The numbers of emerging adults can be estimated by calculating a winter
temperature index by averaging the mean temperatures (expressed in °F) for
December, January, and February. Thus, the winter temperature index can be used
for disease forecasting (Table 2).
Table 2. The relationship between the winter temperature
and disease severity. |
Average temp. (Dec, Jan, and Feb.) |
Early-season wilt will probably be |
Below 27° F |
Absent or nearly so |
Between 27° and 30° F |
Light
|
Between 30° and 33° F |
Moderate |
Above 33° F |
Severe |
Flea beetles seldom survive in the northern half of Illinois because of low
winter temperatures. Those found in late spring or summer have migrated from
the south. Snow or other winter cover apparently has little effect in providing
sufficient shelter to enhance survival of the overwintering flea beetles. Prolonged
periods of wet summer weather are unfavorable for beetle multiplication and
feeding, while dry weather is favorable.
The causal bacteria may live for several months in seed, manure, soil, and
old cornstalks; however, the number of plants that become infected from these
sources is insignificant.
The toothed flea beetle, adult 12-spotted cucumber beetle, and larvae of corn
rootworms, seed corn maggot, wheat wireworm, and white grubs also may carry
the wilt bacteria from one plant to another during the summer.
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Control
- Grow well-adapted, wilt-resistant sweet corn varieties. Sweet corn hybrids
with high levels of resistance to Stewart's wilt are presented in Table
3. At present, there are very few early maturing hybrids with high levels
of resistance to Stewart's wilt. Consult current seed catalogs and trade publications
for additional information on disease resistant hybrids.
- Where corn flea beetles are an annual problem the application of an approved
insecticide may help reduce the spread and overall severity of Stewart's wilt.
- Delayed or later plantings may have less flea beetle activity than early-season
plantings.
- Plant disease-free seed. Reputable seed companies produce their seed corn
where bacterial wilt is absent. Therefore, almost no infected seed corn enters
the trade. Seed treatments are not an effective control measure.
Table 3. Sweet corn hybrids among the most resistant
to Stewart's wilt |
Hybrid |
Days To
Harvest |
Source |
Yellow, shrunken-2 |
Apollo |
85 |
BMM |
Flagship |
85 |
BMM |
GSS 4606 |
85 |
RS |
Maxim |
82 |
HM |
Midship |
75 |
BMM |
Natural Sweet 9000 |
87 |
WCI |
Punchline |
76 |
ASG |
Sch 5005 |
78 |
IFS |
Sch 5276 |
84 |
IFS |
Sch 11069 |
85 |
IFS |
Sch 20777 |
86 |
IFS |
Sch 30375 |
84 |
IFS |
Summer Sweet 7620 |
82 |
AC |
Summer Sweet 7630 |
85 |
AC |
Summer Sweet 7710 |
83 |
AC |
Sweet Season |
83 |
SUN |
Ultimate |
83 |
HM |
Wisc. Natural Sweet |
85 |
WCI |
XPH 3082 |
80 |
ASG |
Bi-color, shrunken-2 |
Crisp n Sweet 730 |
87 |
CR |
Royal Star |
80 |
BMM |
Sch 34422 |
80 |
IFS |
Sweet Success |
82 |
WCI |
Yellow, sugary enhancer |
Classic |
79 |
ASG |
Miracle |
84 |
CR |
Servo |
75 |
ASG |
Summer Flavor 79Y |
79 |
AC |
Sundial |
82 |
HM |
Tastee Treat |
87 |
SUN |
Terminator |
83 |
CR |
Tuxedo |
79 |
STO |
Bi-color sugary enhancer |
Ambrosia |
75 |
CR |
Double Delight |
87 |
CR |
Lancelot |
83 |
STO |
Seneca RXB7703 |
74 |
ROB |
Seneca Wardance |
75 |
ROB |
White, sugary enhancer |
Argent |
86 |
CR |
Silverado |
78 |
HM |
Yellow, sugary |
Buttersweet |
83 |
SUN |
Eliminator |
78 |
CR |
Genesis |
82 |
CR |
GH 2628 |
86 |
RS |
HMX 8396 |
80 |
HM |
Monitor |
80 |
CR |
More |
81 |
ASG |
Prime Pak |
82 |
SUN |
Shield Crest |
85 |
FM |
Sweet Tennessee |
86 |
SUN |
Bi-color, sugary |
Honey n Frost |
83 |
AGW |
White, sugary |
WH 3443 |
88 |
RS |
Days
To Harvest = estimated number of days from planting to harvest. |
Seed
Sources: |
AC - Abbot & Cobb
AGW - Agway/Seedway
ASG - Asgrow
CR - Crookham
FM - Ferry Morse
HM - Harris Moran |
IFS - Illinois Foundation Seeds
LSC - Liberty Seed
BMM - Burpee-Market More
PARK - Park Seeds
RS - Rogers Seeds |
ROB - Robson
AGW - Agway-Seedway
STO - Stokes
SUN - Sunseeds
WCI - Wisconsin Crop Improvement |
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Author:
Darin M. Eastburn
|