Bacterial Blight
In the vegetable garden, bacterial blight is most often a problem on snap beans and lima beans. (Note that other crops also suffer from bacterial diseases that may be called bacterial blight.) Symptoms of infection are large, water-soaked, pale green spots on leaves that later turn brown. These spots may also appear on pods and can produce a yellowish ooze in wet weather. Leaves infected with halo bacterial blight develop many small dead spots with yellow halos around them; spots on pods produce a cream-colored ooze.
The bacterium overwinters on plant debris and in the soil. High humidity and wet weather promote the spread of the disease.
Prevention and Control
- Use a three-year crop rotation for beans.
- Space rows and seeds more widely than usual to allow good air circulation among plants.
- Don't work in the garden when plants are wet. Splashing water spreads bacteria among plants. Use drip irrigation or soaker hoses rather than overhead watering.
- Uproot infected plants and destroy them.
- Do not save and plant seeds from infected plants.
Recommended Products
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Serenade® Garden Disease Control Works with Bacillus subtilis, a soil-dwelling bacterium that controls anthracnose, bacterial spot, leaf blight, early and late blights, rust, powdery mildew, gray mold and black mold, scab and many other diseases.
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Actinovate® Contains a patented beneficial microbe that helps control a wide range of diseases.
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Garden Dust Contains copper sulphate and pyrethrins. Use it as a last resort if other controls are not effective
Gardener-to-Gardener Photos
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