Tomato Pith Necrosis

Tomato Pith Necrosis

Symptoms

Foliar symptoms of pith necrosis are similar to early bacterial canker disease symptoms (wilting and marginal leaf necrosis); therefore internal stem symptoms should be used to distinguish between the two diseases.

Stem: When stems are cut longitudinally, the pith can be severely degraded or hollow, dark brown to black in color and/or have a ladder-like appearance. Early symptoms are browning of the pith.
Stems may be swollen and have a large number of adventitious roots associated with them.
Signs: Bacterial streaming may occur from the margin of a stem lesion using a microscope but many samples may need to be tested before observing bacterial streaming.
Often Confused With: Bacterial Canker – Look for “bird’s eye” spotting on the fruit. Fruit symptoms with pith necrosis are rare. The pith of stems infected with the bacterial canker pathogen is generally white and spongy.
Bacterial Wilt – Leaves wilt and plants collapse suddenly. Brownish discoloration begins in vascular tissue but moves into the pith later. Copious amounts of bacteria stream into water from infected stems and can be seen with the naked eye. Similar bacterial streaming not observed for pith necrosis. Bacterial wilt is extremely rare in temperate climates in the US.

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