Causal Agent:
Fungi (Oidium sp.; Oidiopsis sp.)
Characteristic Symptoms: | |
![]() |
Affected leaf consists of white powdery mold/pustules on the upper leaf surface (caused by Oidium sp.). |
![]() |
Yellowing of the leaf is observed in tomato leaves infected by Oidiopsis sp. White powdery mold is observed on the lower side of the leaf. |
Conditions for Disease Development: | |
![]() |
The disease is common in greenhouse-grown tomatoes and in damp, shaded areas. |
![]() |
Spores can germinate at any relative humidity when temperature is cool (15-25°C). |
![]() |
Once infection has occurred, warm days (above 30°C) with cool (below 25°C) and humid nights favour rapid disease development. |
![]() |
Spores are carried by wind to new hosts. |
![]() |
Disease incidence is greater using furrow or drip irrigation than using overhead irrigation. Spore germination is inhibited by water on plant surfaces for extended periods. |
Management and Control: | |
![]() |
Maintain good field sanitation (i.e. remove & burn infected plants/plant parts as soon as symptoms are observed).
|
![]() |
Avoid excessive use of nitrogenous fertilizer. |
![]() |
Increase light intensity/avoid dense planting or overcrowding. |
![]() |
Apply sulfur-based fungicide (e.g. Kumulus®) or thiophanate-methyl (e.g. Tango, Topsin®) or azoxystrobin (Amistar®, MiradorⓇ, RobatoⓇ), difenoconazole (e.g. ScoreⓇ, MontanaⓇ, PursueⓇ, BashⓇ), tebuconazole (e.g. Folicur®). |
References: | |
Compendium of Cucurbit Diseases (1996) by the American Phytopathological Society | |
To view other diseases, click here.
Need more help? Ask the Doctor.