Dieback Disease Latest News
The withering of thousands of neem trees over some years had prompted the Mulugu-based Forest College & Research Institute (FCRI), to launch a comprehensive scientific probe into the devastating "dieback disease."
About Dieback Disease
- It is a fungal disease which kills a wide variety of plants.
- It is responsible for causing wilting and browning of leaves from the tip of the branch, stem canker, and fruit rot.
- It was first reported in the country during the 1990s near Dehradun in Uttarakhand.
- The dieback fungus belongs to the genus Phytophthora
- Mode of spread:Â
- The fungus is spread through the movement of soil and mud, especially by vehicles and footwear.Â
- It also moves in free water and via root-to root contact between plants.
- The fungus lives in susceptible plant tissue and soil, and migrates and reproduces in warm, moist conditions.Â
- Infected roots cannot provide the water and nutrients needed to maintain life, and the plants die from dehydration.
- It causes almost 100% loss of fruit production in severely infected trees.
- Where the disease occurs, the native vegetation can become devastated, and the delicate fabric of ecosystems seriously impaired; certain species can disappear from the area.
- The appearance of symptoms starts with the onset of the rainy season and becomes progressively severe in the later part of the rainy season and early winter.
- Dieback is not easy to detect, as infected plants often appear to be dying from drought.
- There is no known cure for the disease.
Source: DC
Dieback Disease FAQs
Q1: Dieback disease is caused by which type of pathogen?
Ans: Fungus
Q2: What is the common symptom of dieback disease?
Ans: Browning of leaves from the tip of the branch.
Q3: Why is dieback disease often difficult to detect in its early stages?
Ans: Infected plants appear similar to drought stress
Q4: Where was dieback disease first reported in India?
Ans: Near Dehradun in Uttarakhand.