VegNet Vol. 13,
No. 17.
On the WEB at: http://vegnet.osu.edu
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fax, Call 614-292-3857
In This Issue
1. Can Hydrogen Peroxide (or Dioxide – H2O2)
Control Plant Disease?
2. Bacterial Canker in Peppers
3. Section 18 Emergency Exemption For Quintec Use on Cucurbits Denied
4. Crop Reports
Can
Hydrogen Peroxide (or Dioxide – H2O2) Control Plant
Disease? By Sally Miller
When I was a child and had an earache, my mother got the little
brown bottle of hydrogen peroxide out of the medicine cabinet and poured some
into my ear. It crackled and bubbled but
I don’t ever remember my earache going away after this treatment – it took a
trip to the pediatrician and a prescription for an antibiotic to do that. Hydrogen peroxide continues to be used today
as a folk remedy, with all kinds of proponents claiming it as a cure for
everything from stuffy noses to cancer.
While hydrogen peroxide in high concentrations is a known bleaching
agent and disinfectant, its ability to prevent or cure the vast majority of
ailments for which it is touted is strongly disputed.
In the past few years, claims have been made that hydrogen dioxide
can be used to prevent and cure plant diseases.
These claims are just as controversial as those in the medical arena. Hydrogen dioxide is purported to control
plant diseases by killing bacteria or fungi on contact, including those that
have invaded the tissue. But can these claims be true? A search of scientific literature quickly
showed that where H2O2 treatments have been tested
directly against plant, animal and human pathogens, at rates up to 5%, it was
not effective in reducing bacterial or fungal spore populations. (Labeled rates for foliar application of a
hydrogen dioxide product currently marketed for plant disease control range
from 0.09 – 0.27%.)
I am not aware of any independent, replicated tests of any H2O2
product that have shown significant disease control in vegetable crops. Our own studies with such products in both
conventional and organic systems have consistently failed to demonstrate any
efficacy in bacterial or fungal disease management.
H2O2 at low concentrations is not harmful to
humans, animals or the environment and does not leave residues. So what harm can there be in using it? First, H2O2 can burn
leaves if the concentration exceeds 0.27%.
Secondly, even if one gives the product the benefit of the doubt and
assumes it kills at least some spores and bacteria on leaf surfaces, since it
has no residual activity, protection is limited to the brief time during which
it comes into contact with the plant surface.
The rest of the time plants are exposed to the many bacterial cells and
fungal spores on the leaf surface, splashing about in raindrops or irrigation
water or moving on air currents. Relying on this tiny window of activity can
lead to a false sense of security, especially if one forgoes the use of proven
products. Further, there is no evidence
that mixing H2O2 with a fungicide enhances the
fungicide’s activity. Recent studies at
Bacterial
Canker in Peppers by Sally Miller
Bacterial canker was found this week in hot peppers in
Figure 1. Marginal necrosis
and leaf spots in pepper leaves infected with bacterial canker (caused by Clavibacter michiganensis subsp. michiganensis.

Figure 2. Blister-like symptoms on the underside of a pepper leaf
with bacterial canker.
Section
18 Emergency Exemption For Quintec Use on Cucurbits Denied by Sally
Miller
The Ohio Department of Agriculture received word this week that
the Section 18 emergency exemption requested for the use of Quintec
to manage powdery mildew in cucurbits was
denied by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). The EPA based its decision on published
efficacy data that show that other products, including Procure and Nova, which
are registered for cucurbits in
Crop Reports by Ron
Becker
Wayne County Report (