Richard M. Riedel
Sally A. Miller
Randall C. Rowe
Several different species of Fusarium, a soil-borne fungus, cause wilting of watermelon, muskmelon, cucumber, squash, and other vine crops. In many cases the fungus-causing wilt in a particular crop is specific to that crop. These fungi are generally capable of surviving for long periods in the soil.
Wilting of older plants is often the first symptom of the disease. Before diseased plants totally collapse, however, they may begin to wilt during the hottest part of the day and recover during the night. Infected plants are often stunted and yellowed. Leaves often have dead areas which can mimic nutrient deficiencies. Stems of wilted plants when cut lengthwise at the soil line may show brown discoloration in the woody tissues immediately under the bark. Vines killed by Fusarium can be covered with pinkish-white fungal growth in wet weather.
Fusarium oxysporum is well adapted to life in the soil. It can survive season to season in old diseased vines or it can live free in infested soil for many years in the absence of its host crop. The fungus grows at soil moisture and temperature favorable for vine crop growth. If the soil is very wet, infection is reduced. The fungus is stimulated to germinate when roots of susceptible host plants are growing nearby. It enters the plant through root tips or where some opening is present.
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