From: Adam Black epiphyte1 at earthlink.net> on 2006.07.08 at 18:05:21(14395)
We are suddenly having a severe problem with the Amorphophallus species
at the botanical gardens where I work. We are seeing a localized rotting
of the base of the petiole an inch or two above the soil line that turns
the petiole base to jelly and topples the leaf. It is affecting all
three species we have - A. konjac, A. bulbifer, and A. paeoniifolius,
and is occurring in various areas of the gardens that are seperated by a
considerable distance and have been otherwise healthy in thier locations
in the ground for years. I started noticing it in the konjacs and the
bulbifers a month or so ago shortly after they put up thier leaves, and
the rate of loss has escalated from there. I just now noticed on the
late emerging paeoniifolius that most of them have early signs of this
infection. I am by no means an expert on fungi, but there are several
different colors of fungus on the affected areas, but I am not sure if
this is secondary or not. The infection starts out as a brown patch on
the base of the petiole a few inches above the soil/leaf litter line,
and this progresses around the petiole and inward, but does not spread
up or down the petiole from that point. I dug up one corm from an
infected A. bulbifer and it appeared shrunken in and clearly unhealthy,
felt softer than a healthy corm but no external evidence of rot was
evident. I did not cut it open to see what it looked like inside, but
plan to on another specimen this week.The base of the petiole below
where the leaf had rotted off was still healthy in appearance and firmly
connected to the corm.
Curiously, I have yet to see it affect any similar aroids growing
side-by-side with affected Amorphs in the gardens including Typhonium
venosum (of which we have many plants), Gonatopus bovinii, Remusatia
vivipera, and our native Arisaema triphyllum and jillions of Arisaema
dracontium. The Amorphs affected include both potted specimens and those
situated in the ground for years, and among the potted specimens some
affected plants are in a greenhouse with controlled watering, while
other potted plants are exposed to the weather in addition to
supplemental irrigation. I am keeping a closer eye on it now, but the
infection appears to spread and rot through the petiole relatively
quickly, so that the leaf itself still looks unstressed and perfectly
healthy after it has rotted off. I have only worked here since this past
winter, but the gardens director remembers a few Amorphs having this
problem last year but didn't think much of it, as the hundreds of others
in our mass plantings looked fine. If I had to guess now, I would say we
have lost about 60 or so plants with about as many showing the early
stages of the infection. It also seems to affect our mid to largest size
specimens rather than the smaller plants.
Has anybody seen this before? Any recommendations? I am going to try a
fungicide this week, but with the huge number of plants we have spread
out all over our 60+ acre gardens, I am worried about how effective any
methods will be in controlling this. If anyone is interested I can email
photos of affected plants in various stages of infection.
Thanks
Adam
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