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Agricultural crops :: Pulses :: Cowpea

Southern blight: Sclerotium rolfsii

Symptom
  • Southern blight is caused by a fungus that attacks roots and stems of cowpeas.
  • The first visible symptom of southern blight is a progressive, yellowing and wilting of the foliage beginning on the lower leaves.
  • The plant dies within a few days.
  • A brownish vascular discoloration inside dead stem may extend several inches above the soil line.
  • During warm, moist conditions, the coarse, white mycelium of the fungus makes characteristic fan-shaped patterns of growth on the stem at the soil line.
  • In this white-mat of the fungus, numerous smooth, round, light-tan to dark-brown mustard seed-like bodies called sclerotia are formed.

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