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Management strategies stog-chickpea
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CGKB News and events stog-chickpea

Fungi - chickpea

Contributors to this page: ICRISAT, India (RP Thakur, AG Girish, VP Rao); ICARDA, Syria (Siham Asaad, Abdulrahman Moukahal).

Contents:
Alternaria blight
Ascochyta blight, Leaf blight, Pod spot
Botrytis gray mold
Anthracnose, Colletotrichum blight
Fusarium wilt
Phoma blight
Phoma leaf blight, Chickpea leaf spot
Stemphylium leaf blight
Dry root rot, Charcoal rot
Stemphylium blight

Alternaria blight

Scientific name

Alternaria alternata (Fr.) Keissl. and Alternaria tenuis.

Significance

It is a seedborne and soilborne disease considered serious in parts of Bangladish and India.

Symptoms

Water soaked, small, circular and purple lesions surrounded by chlorotic tissues on leaflets. Lesions later turn brown to dark brown.

The infected flowers die.

Circular, slightly sunken and irregularly scattered lesions on the pods. Affected pods turn dirty black.

The pods contain shrivelled seeds.

Hosts

Alternaria alternata has a wide host range, causing leaf spots and blights on many plant parts.

Geographic distribution

Bangladesh, India and Nepal.

Biology and transmission

Alternaria alternate survive the intercropping period on infected canola stubble, on cruciferous weeds and, to a lesser extent, on seed. Seed infections can cause seedlings to rot (refer to damping-off section) resulting in a seedling blight that reduces plant establishment. Initial crop infections are caused by wind blown spores. Spores remain intact on susceptible plants until moisture from dew or rain allows them to penetrate into the tissue and cause a lesion. These lesions produce further spores and infections can then be spread throughout the crop by either the wind or rain. Mild, humid conditions favour disease development and the disease cycle will continue throughout the season under favourable conditions. Hot and dry conditions interrupt epidemics as the absence of moisture greatly reduces spore production. Major outbrat ICARDA eaks are not common in Australia as weather conditions are normally hot and dry throughout podding which is unfavourable for prolonged infection.  

Detection/indexing methods in place at the CGIAR Centres

  • At ICARDA - Blotter test.
  • At ICRISAT - Not specifically tested.

Treatment/control

  • Cultural Control
    • Use wider spacing between plants.
    • Avoid excessive vegetative growth.
    • Intercrop with linseed.
    • Avoid excessive irrigation.
    • Use compact varieties.
  • Chemical control
    • Use mancozeb at the rate of 3 g\l.
    • Use carbandazim at 1.5 g\l.

Procedure in case of positive test

Seed treatments.

References and further reading

http://www.jnkvv.nic.in/IPM%20Project/disease-chickpea.html#Alternaria_blight

http://www.dbtbiopesticides.nic.in

http://www.ncipm.org.in

http://www.icrisat.org/vasat/learning_resources/chickpea/chickpea_diseases/fungal_aerial_alternaria.htm

Alternaria Blight (photo: www.jnkvv.nic.in)

 Alternaria Blight (photo: www.dbtbiopesticides.nic.in)

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Ascochyta blight, Leaf blight, Pod spot

Scientific Name

Ascochyta rabiei [Pass.] Labr. (Teleomorph: Didymella rabiei, G.J. Jellis & Punith.)

Importance

High.

Significance

Ascochyta rabiei is recognized as the main biotic constraint facing winter chickpea, if favourable conditions (wet weather and mild temperatures) prevail. The disease can spread in epidemic form and results in 100% yield loss, especially on local non-improved cultivars.

Symptoms

This disease is usually first noticed in late winter when small patches of blighted plants appear throughout the paddock. The disease spreads during cool, wet weather from infected plants to surrounding plants by rain splash of spores. This creates large blighted patches within crops. Initially ascochyta blight appears on the younger leaves as small water soaked pale spots. These spots rapidly enlarge under cool and wet conditions, joining with other spots on the leaves and blighting the leaves and buds. Small black spots (pycnidia), less than 1 mm in diameter, can be seen in the affected areas. In severe cases of infection the entire plant dries up suddenly. Elongated lesions can often form and girdle the stem. The stem may die and break off. Regrowth may occur from the broken stem. Affected areas on the pods tend to be round, sunken, with pale centers and dark margins. The fungus can penetrate the pod and infect the seed. Severe pod infection usually results in reduced seed set and infected seed. When infected seeds are sown, the emerging seedlings will develop dark brown lesions at the base of the stem. Affected seedlings may collapse and die (damping-off).

Ascochyta Blight of Chickpea
(photos: www.dpi.qld.gov.au)

Hosts

Chickpea.

Geographic distribution

Cosmopolitan.

Biology and transmission

This fungal disease has an asexual and sexual stage; the asexual stage is most common. In this stage the fungus survives mainly on infected seed and on crop residues.

Spores of the fungus produced on crop residues can be carried to new crops by wind. Infection can occur at any stage of plant growth, provided conditions are favourable. Moisture is essential for infection to occur.

During wet weather, the disease can spread further than in dry conditions because spores of the fungus are carried onto neighbouring plants by wind and rain splash.

Detection/indexing methods in place at the CGIAR Centres

  • At ICARDA - Malt Extract Agar.
  • At ICRISAT - Keep the surface sterilized seeds (with 1% sodium hypochlorite for ten minutes) on potato dextrose agar and incubate for seven days at 22°C with 12 hr photoperiod. Examine for typical colony characteristic of A. rabiei (Haware et al. 1986).

Leaf blight (photo: www.dpi.qld.gov.au)

Pod spot (photo: ICRISAT)

Treatment/control

  • Crop rotation. Since only chickpea is susceptible to Ascochyta blight caused by A. rabiei, inclusion of non-host crops in the rotation will bring about a reduction in the inoculum level. Chickpea should not be grown more frequently than every 3-4 years. Furthermore, new crops should not be grown near fields that were infested with blight in the previous year due to the risk of infection by airborne ascospores.
  • Tillage. Under most conditions, deep ploughing will hasten decomposition of infected chickpea straw and remove it as a source of inoculum. Studies conducted in the Palouse Region in Washington State showed that the pathogen survived in naturally infected plant material for more than two years when situated on the soil surface, but lost its viability rapidly at soil depths of 10-40 cm. All infested crop residues and volunteer plants should therefore be destroyed by thorough tillage and proper crop rotation.
  • Fungicide application. Growers should take special care to protect green and healthy foliage during pod filling, especially if blight symptoms appear and increase in severity. Tests with application of Bravo 500 at different crop stages have shown that spraying at early podding reduced pod damage and markedly increased seed yields in the moderately resistant cultivars. Foliar fungicide applications may not prove cost effective when disease pressure is low. Thiram-based fungicides are registered for the treatment of grey mould infected seed. While seed treatment can improve establishment, it does not provide any protection from airborne infection later in the crop.

Procedure in place at the CGIAR Centres case of positive test

  • At ICARDA - Late planting, destroying seed if the seed is showing symptoms and is heavily infected, and fungicide seed treatment for seeds not showing symptoms.
  • At ICRISAT - So far not detected.

References and further reading

http://www.dpi.vic.gov.au/dpi/nreninf.nsf/v/DA03D31F99215E18CA2574A50015BF05/$file/Ascochyta%20Blight%20of%20Chickpeas.pdf

http://www.icarda.org/participatory_research/Ascochyta.htm

http://www.dpi.qld.gov.au/cps/rde/dpi/hs.xsl/30_13279_ENA_HTML.htm

Haware MP, Nene YL, Mathur SB. 1986. Seedborne diseases of chickpea. Technical Bulletin No. 1. Copenhagen, Denmark: Danish Government Institute of Seed Pathology for developing countries. 32pp.

Ascochyta blight (Ascochyta rabiei) of chickpea: symptoms on (A) seeds; (B) pycnidia on seed; (C) pycnidia and (D) conidia (photos: ICRISAT)

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Botrytis grey mould

Scientific name

Botrytis cinerea Pers. Ex Fr.

Other scientific names

Botryotinia fuckeliana (de Bary) Whetzel (teleomorph).

Importance

Low.

Significance

Botrytis gray mould is the most important disease affecting chickpea in the eastern Terai region of Nepal and is responsible for the complete failure of the crop with estimated yield loss of 15% in farmers’ fields (Chaurasia and Joshi 2001). More than 80% crop loss has been reported in Bangladesh and North-western India. However, under favourable conditions yield losses up to 95% have been reported (Pande et al. 2002).

Symptoms

Botrytis gray mould is usually seen at flowering and symptoms develop on the stems, flowers, leaves and pods as grey or dark brown lesions. The grey fungal growth is evident on the flowers and the petioles if observed in the early morning. Drooping of the affected tender terminal branches is a common field symptom. In cloudy weather flower drop and rotting of plant parts are common. Under favourable weather conditions brown spots develop on the leaflets and circular to elongated spots formed on the branches. Sometimes, tiny black sclerotial masses appear on the dead tissue. On the infected plants either no seed set or only shrivelled seeds appear. On infected pods, lesions are water soaked and irregular in shape, and black sclerotial bodies are seen (Haware et al. 1992).

Botrytis grey mould (Botrytis cinerea) of chickpea: (A) infected plant
without pods; (B) greyish colony on twig and
(C) lesions on leaf and flower (photos: ICRISAT)

Hosts

Vitis vinifera (grapevine), Chrysanthemum x morifolium (chrysanthemum (florists')), Malus pumila (apple), Pyrus communis (European pear), Phaseolus (bean), Brassicaceae (cruciferous crops), Allium cepa (onion), Cucumis sativus (cucumber), Helianthus annuus (sunflower), Hibiscus cannabinus (kenaf), Lactuca sativa (lettuce), Linum usitatissimum (flax), Lycopersicon esculentum (tomato), Pisum sativum (pea), Rosa (rose), Allium fistulosum (Welsh onion), Arachis hypogaea (groundnut), Brassica rapa subsp. pekinensis (Pe-tsai), Carthamus tinctorius (safflower), Chrysanthemum (daisy), Cicer arietinum (chickpea), Calendula officinalis (Pot marigold), Capsicum (peppers), Phaseolus vulgaris (common bean), Sesbania cannabina (corkwood tree), Solanum melongena (aubergine), Triticum aestivum (wheat), Vicia faba (broad bean), Vicia sativa (common vetch) and Zinnia elegans (Zinnia).

 

Botrytis grey mould of chickpea: (D) pods; (E) seeds; (F) fungal growth on seed and (G)conidiophore with cluster of conidia (photos: ICRISAT)

Geographic distribution

Botrytis grey mould is a serious disease in parts of Bangladesh, India, Nepal and Pakistan. It has also been reported in Argentina, Australia, Canada and Chile.

Biology and transmission

The mycelium of B. cinerea is septate, brown, hyphae being 8-16 m wide. The conidiophores are light brown, septate, erect and their tips are slightly enlarged bearing small and pointed sterigmata. The conidia are hyaline, 1-celled, oval and are borne in clusters on short sterigmata. The conidia in mass are ash-grey in colour, and measure 4-16  4-20 m. The disease is transmitted by the seedborne fungus from location to location.

Conidia (photos: ICRISAT)

Detection/indexing methods in place at the CGIAR Centres

  • At ICRISAT - Pre-export field inspection and blotter test.
  • At ICARDA - Culture on PDA.

Treatment

  • Seed treatment with a mixture of 25% carbendazim and 50% thiram at 2.5 g kg-1 seed (Pande et al. 2002).

Procedures in place at the CGIAR Centres in case of positive test

  • At ICRISAT - Rejection of the infected seed samples.
  • At ICARDA - Seed treatment.

References and further reading

Ahmed KM, Ravinder Reddy Ch.1993. A Pictorial guide to the identification of seedborne fungi of sorghum, pearl millet, finger millet, chickpea, pigeonpea and groundnut. Information Bulletin No. 34. Patancheru, A.P. 502 324 India: International Crops Research Institute for the semi-Arid Tropics. 200 pp.

Chakrabarty SK, Anitha K, Girish AG, Sarath Babu B, Prasada Rao RDVJ, Varaprasad KS, Khetarpal RK, Thakur RP. 2005. Germplasm exchange and quarantine of ICRISAT mandate crops. Information Bulletin No. 69. Rajendranagar 500 030, Andhra Pradesh, India: National Bureau of Plant Genetic Resources; and Patancheru 502 324, Andhra Pradesh, India: International Crops Research Institute for the Semi Arid Tropics. 80pp.

Chaurasia PCP, Joshi S. 2001. Management of Botrytis gray mold of chickpea at Tarahara, Nepal. Nepal Agricultural Research Journal 4 & 5:37-41.

Haware MP, Faris DG, Gowda CLL, editors 1992. Botrytis gray mold of chickpea: summary proceedings of the BARI/ICRISAT Working Group Meeting to discuss Collaborative Research on Botrytis Gray Mold of chickpea, 4-8 March 1991. Joydebpur, Bangladesh; Patancheru, A.P. 502324, India: International Crops Research Institute for the Semi Arid Tropics, 23pp.

Pande S, Singh G, Narayana Rao J, Bakr MA, Chaurasia PCP, Joshi S, Johanson C, Singh SD, Kumar J, Rahman MM, Gowda CLL. 2002. Integrated management of botrytis gray mold of chickpea. In: Information Bulletin No. 61. Patancheru, Andhra Pradesh, India. International Crops Research Institute for the Semi Arid Tropics, 32pp.

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Anthracnose, Colletotrichum blight

Scientific name

Colletotrichum dematium (Pers ex Fr) Grove.

Other scientific names

Colletotrichum bakeri, Colletotrichum brassicae, Colletotrichum lysimachiae, Colletotrichum pucciniophilum, Colletotrichum sanguisorbae, Colletotrichum volutella.

Importance

Low.

Significance

Anthracnose is of minor importance in chickpea growing areas.

Symptoms

Small water soaked yellowish spots appear on the lower leaves which later turn into circular brown lesions with yellow margin 1-3 mm in diameter. In some cases lesions enlarge rapidly, become irregular and cover the entire leaflet, and extend to the stipules and stems. Lesions on pods are circular to elongate, and sunken at the centre.  Plants wilt and dry due to severe infection (Nene et al. 1991).

 Anthracnose (Colletotrichum dematium) of chickpea: symptoms on (A) plant, Infected row (I), healthy row (H); (B) pods and (C) seed (photos: ICRISAT).

Hosts

Allium cepa (onion), Allium sativum (garlic), Arachis hypogaea (groundnut), Beta vulgaris (beetroot), Helianthus annuus (sunflower), Vicia faba (broad bean), Abelmoschus esculentus (okra), Cicer arietinum (chickpea), Capsicum annuum (bell pepper), Crotalaria juncea (sunn hemp), Glycine max (soybean), Lablab purpureus (hyachinth bean), Lycopersicon esculentum (tomato), Vigna radiata (bean, mung), Vigna mungo (black gram), Spinacia oleracea (spinach), Cyamopsis tetragonoloba (clusterbean), Gomphrena globosa (Globe amaranth), Medicago sativa (lucerne), Ricinus communis (castor bean) and Amaranthus hybridus (green amaranth).

Anthracnose of chickpea: symptoms on (D) mycelial growth on seed; (E) acervuli on seed with setae and (F) conidia (photos: ICRISAT).

Geographic distribution

Colletotrichum dematiumis worldwide in distribution, especially in several countries of Europe, Asia, Africa and Oceania.

 Biology and transmission

White mycelium is seen on infected plant parts and sometimes acervuli with black setae are also seen. Acervuli are circular, erumpent, dark brown to black, which scatter throughout infected part or aggregated, and in groups. Acervuli release conidia in pale yellow to grey masses. The colour of the acervular masses is pale to bright orange. Within the acervular masses numerous thick black, erect hair like spines or setae are seen. Setae are longer than the acervular masses. Conidia are hyaline, single-celled, measure 2.5-4 ´ 15-32 mm, fusoid and tapered at both ends. The disease is transmitted through infected seed and soil borne inoculum (Ahmed and Ravinder Reddy 1993).

Detection/indexing methods in place at the CGIAR Centres

  • At ICRISAT - Pre-export field inspection and blotter test.
  • At ICARDA - Agar plate method.

Treatment/control

  • At ICRISAT - A minor disease and does not require any specific control measure.
  • At ICARDA - Chlorothalonil used on lentils. Not known for chickpea.

Procedures in place in the CGIAR Centres in case of positive test

  • At ICRISAT - Incineration of infected plants and rejection of infected samples.
  • At ICARDA - Seed treatment.

References and further reading

Nene YL, Reddy MV, Haware MP, Ganekar AM,  Amin KS. 1991. Field diagnosis of chickpea diseases and their control. Information bulletin no. 28, Patancheru, A.P. 502 324 India: International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics, 52pp.

CGIAR-published references on seed health

Ahmed KM, Ravinder Reddy Ch.1993. A pictorial guide to the identification of seed borne fungi of sorghum, pearl millet, finger millet, chickpea, pigeonpea and groundnut. Information Bulletin No. 34. Patancheru, A.P. 502 324 India: International Crops Research Institute for the semi-Arid Tropics. 200 pp.

Chakrabarty SK, Anitha K, Girish AG, Sarath Babu B, Prasada Rao RDVJ, Varaprasad KS, Khetarpal RK, Thakur RP. 2005. Germplasm exchange and quarantine of ICRISAT mandate crops. Information Bulletin No. 69. Rajendranagar 500 030, Andhra Pradesh, India: National Bureau of Plant Genetic Resources; and Patancheru 502 324, Andhra Pradesh, India: International Crops Research Institute for the Semi Arid Tropics. 80pp.

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Fusarium wilt

Scientific name

Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. ciceri (Padwick) Snyd. & Hans.

Importance

Low.

Significance

Fusarium wilt is prevalent in most chickpea growing countries and is a major disease of economic importance in Asian countries. Seeds harvested from infected plants are lighter and duller than those from healthy plants (Haware and Nene 1980).

Symptoms

Chickpea foliage develops a greyish-green chlorosis, typically affecting lower leaves first and extending up the plant. Leaves eventually take on a dull-yellow colour, wilt and the plant collapses and dies. Adult plants wilt, with their petioles and rachises drooping. In some cases there may be leaf vein clearing before wilt begins. Internally, the xylem tissues stain dark brown to almost black. Wilting may initially affect only one side of the plant.

Fusarium wilt (Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. ciceri)
of chickpea wilting symptom (photo: ICRISAT)

Hosts

Cicer arietinum (chickpea), Cajanus cajan (pigeon pea), Lens culinaris ssp. culinaris (lentil) and Pisum sativum (pea).

Geographic distribution

Wide distribution. Fusarium wilt is a serious disease of chickpea in India, Iran, Pakistan, Nepal, Burma, Spain, Tunesia, Mexico, Morocco, Algeria and Syria (Haware 1990).

Biology and transmission

F. oxysporum f. sp. ciceri can survive for many years either in soil as chlamydospores or as a saprobe in plant debris. Microconidia are borne on simple short conidiophores arising laterally on the hyphae. These are oval to cylindrical, straight to curved, and 5-15 ´ 2-5 µm, collecting in small, slimy droplets. Macroconidia 1-7 (mostly 3-5) septate, 25-55 ´ 2.5-6 µm, fusiform, curved, with a tapering, pointed, sometimes hooked, apical cell and distinctly pedicellate basal cell. Macroconidia arising from phialides similar to those forming microconidia except often in clusters, borne on irregularly branching cells. In some strains macroconidia are sparse, in others, abundantly produced in pinkish sporodochial conidiomata. Chlamydospores are globose, hyaline 7-15 µm diameter, usually forming abundantly in mature colonies, terminal or intercalary, single or in small groups or chains. Conidia are dispersed by water flow, rain splash and by movement of infected soil or plant material, especially seed. Following infection of host roots, the fungus crosses the cortex and enters the xylem tissues. It then spreads rapidly up through the vascular system, becoming systemic in the host tissues, and may directly infect the seed.

Fusarium wilt of chickpea: (B) and (C) xylum discoloration in infected plant and (D) infected seeds (photos: ICRISAT)

Detection/indexing methods

  • At ICRISAT - Pre-export field inspection and blotter test, and for confirmation of the fungus agar plate method is used. Agar plate method includes surface sterilization of the seeds with 2.5% sodium hypochlorite for 2 minutes, plating the seeds on Czapeks agar (amended with 500 mg PCNB, 25 g malachite green, 750 mg strepto-penicillin, and 2 g yeast extract/liter), and incubating the seeds at 20°C under a 12 hr NUV/12 hr dark light cycle for 8 days (Haware et al. 1978).
  • At ICARDA - Agar plate method, freezing blotter test.

Treatment/control

  • Seed treatment with 1.5 g-1 kg seed with benomyl + thiram (1:1 vol.) (Haware et al. 1978). (ICRISAT). 

The wilt incidence of chickpea caused by Fusarium oxysporum f.sp. ciceris was reduced by treating the seeds with fungicides (thiram, carbendazim, captan and mancozeb, 2 g/kg) and application of Trichoderma spp. (T. viride, T. harzianum, T. longiflorum and T. hamatum at 500 g/plot) to wilt sick soil. Use of resistant cultivars in combination either with the fungicidal seed treatment or soil application of Trichoderma spp. were significantly superior in minimizing wilt incidence over the control in both the years (1999-2000 and 2000-01). Good results were obtained in combination either with seed treatment, with fungicides or with biological control agents.(ICARDA).

(E) mycellial growth on seed; (F) mycellium with conidia (powdery dots); (G) microconidia and (H) macroconidia (photos: ICRISAT)

 Procedures in place at the CGIAR Centres in case of positive test

  • At ICRISAT - Rejection of the infected seed sample.
  • At ICARDA - Crop rotation, seed treatment.

 References and further reading

Ahmed KM, Ravinder Reddy Ch.1993. A Pictorial guide to the identification of seedborne fungi of sorghum, pearl millet, finger millet, chickpea, pigeonpea and groundnut. Information Bulletin No. 34. Patancheru, A.P. 502 324 India: International Crops Research Institute for the semi-Arid Tropics. 200 pp.

Chakrabarty SK, Anitha K, Girish AG, Sarath Babu B, Prasada Rao RDVJ, Varaprasad KS, Khetarpal RK, Thakur RP. 2005. Germplasm exchange and quarantine of ICRISAT mandate crops. Information Bulletin No. 69. Rajendranagar 500 030, Andhra Pradesh, India: National Bureau of Plant Genetic Resources; and Patancheru 502 324, Andhra Pradesh, India: International Crops Research Institute for the Semi Arid Tropics. 80pp.

Haware MP. 1990. Fusarium wilt and other important diseases of chickpea in Mediterranean area. CIHEAM-Options Mediterraneennes Seminar Series No.9:61-64.

Haware MP, Nene YL. 1980. Influence of wilt at different stages on the yield loss in chickpea. Tropical Grain Legume Bulletin 19:38-44.

Haware MP, Nene YL, Rajeshwari R. 1978. Eradication of Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. ciceri transmitted in chickpea seed. Phytopathology 68:1364-1367.

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Phoma blight

Scientific name

Phomopsis longicolla Hobbs.

Importance

Low.

Significance

Seed germination can be reduced by as much as 90% (Kmetz et al. 1978) since it is a seedborne disease. About 40% yield losses have been reported when planted with infected seeds (Wall et al. 1983).

Symptoms

Infected seedlings become blighted and die. Those that survive have colourless or bright red to orange cotyledonary lesions that range in size from pinpoints to lesions that cover the whole cotyledon. Small reddish brown streaks, 1.5 cm long, form on hypocotyls. Senescent tissues are covered with minute, black pycnidia, usually arranged linearly on stems. Pycnidia are scattered on dry, poorly developed pods. They may also occur on mature pods. Severely infected seeds are shriveled, badly cracked, and frequently covered by white mycelium. Infected seeds could be a means of introducing the pathogen into new areas (Garzonio and McGee 1983).

Phoma blight (Phomopsis longicolla) of chickpea: (A)lesion with pycnidia and (B)pycnidiospores (photos: www.bspp.org.uk/publications/newdisease)

Hosts

Glycine max (soyabean) and several others areAbelmoschus esculentus (okra), Abutilon theophrasti (China jute), Allium cepa (onion), Allium sativum (garlic), Arachis hypogaea (groundnut), Alysicarpus vaginalis (alyce clover), Capsicum frutescens (chili), Kummerowia striata (common lespedeza), Lotus corniculatus (bird's-foot trefoil), Lupinus (lupins), Lycopersicon esculentum (tomato), Phaseolus acutifolius (tepary bean), Phaseolus coccineus (bean runner), Phaseolus lunatus (lima bean), Phaseolus vulgaris (common bean), Pisum sativum (pea), Trifolium pratense (purple clover) and Vigna unguiculata (cowpea).

Geographic distribution

Widely distributed in Asia, Africa, Europe, America and Oceania.

Biology and transmission

Fungal colonies are colourless, with black, spreading stromata. Pycnidia are black, solitary or aggregated, unilocular or multilocular, with prominent necks more than 200 µm long. Alpha conidia are hyaline, ellipsoid to fusiform, guttulate, and 5-9 ´ 1.5-3.5µm. Beta conidia, which are rarely formed, are hyaline and filiform, sometimes curved at the end.

Detection/indexing methods

  • at ICRISAT - Not detected at ICRISAT.
  • at ICARDA - Not applicable.

Treatment

So far not available.

Procedures in CGIAR in case of positive test

  • at ICRISAT - Incineration of the infected crop and rejection of the infected seed samples.
  • at ICARDA - Not applicable

References and further reading

Ahmed KM, Ravinder Reddy Ch.1993. A Pictorial guide to the identification of seed borne fungi of sorghum, pearl millet, finger millet, chickpea, pigeonpea and groundnut. Information Bulletin No. 34. Patancheru, A.P. 502 324 India: International Crops Research Institute for the semi-Arid Tropics. 200 pp.

Chakrabarty SK, Anitha K, Girish AG, Sarath Babu B, Prasada Rao RDVJ, Varaprasad KS, Khetarpal RK, Thakur RP. 2005. Germplasm exchange and quarantine of ICRISAT mandate crops. Information Bulletin No. 69. Rajendranagar 500 030, Andhra Pradesh, India: National Bureau of Plant Genetic Resources; and Patancheru 502 324, Andhra Pradesh, India: International Crops Research Institute for the Semi Arid Tropics. 80pp.

Garzonio DM, McGee DC. 1983. Comparison of seeds and crop residues as sources of inoculum for pod and stem blight of soybeans. Plant Disease 67: 1374-1376.

Kmetz KT, Schmitthenner AF, Ellett CW. 1978. Soybean seed decay: prevalence of infection and symptom expression caused by Phomopsis sp., Diaporthe phaseolorum var. sojae, and D. phaseolorum var. caulivora. Phytopathology 68: 836-840.

Wall MT, McGee DC, Burris JS. 1983. Emergence and yield of fungicide-treated soybean seed differing in quality. Journal of Agronomy 75:969-973.

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Phoma leaf blight, Chickpea leaf spot

(A)Leaf spot (Phoma medicaginis) of chickpea (photo: ICRISAT)

Scientific name

Phoma medicaginis Malbr. & Roum.

Other scientific name

Phoma medicaginisvar.pinodella Malbr. & Roum

Importance

High

Significance

Phoma leaf blight is of minor importance in India and elsewhere in the world (Haware and Nene 1981).

Symptoms

Phoma leaf blight affects the crop in the reproductive stage. The field symptom is the patches of drying plants. Lesions are irregular, light brown on the leaves, stems and pods with dark margins. Dark, minute, submerged pycnidia are irregularly scattered in the infected tissue. Seeds from the infected plants are discolored and shriveled (Nene et al. 1991).

Leaf spot symptoms on (B)twig and (C)pod (photo: ICRISAT)

Hosts

Glycine max (soyabean) and several others areAbelmoschus esculentus (okra), Abutilon theophrasti (China jute), Allium cepa (onion), Allium sativum (garlic), Arachis hypogaea (groundnut), Alysicarpus vaginalis (alyce clover), Capsicum frutescens (chilli), Kummerowia striata (common lespedeza), Lotus corniculatus (bird's-foot trefoil), Lupinus (lupins), Lycopersicon esculentum (tomato), Melilotus alba, Phaseolus acutifolius (tepary bean), Phaseolus coccineus (bean (runner)), Phaseolus lunatus (lima bean), Phaseolus vulgaris (common bean), Pisum sativum (pea), Strophostyles helvola, Trifolium pratense (purple clover) and Vigna unguiculata (cowpea).

Geographic distribution

It is a minor disease reported from Australia, Bangladesh, India and USA.

Biology and transmission

The mycelium is dark gray to black. Hyphae are thick, branched and have rough surfaces. Pycnidia arise singly or in aggregate masses with extremely variable shapes, 200-300mm in diameter, usually globe to subglobose. Conidia are hyaline to pale yellow, aseptate, straight, 4.5-8.0 ´ 2-3 mm and guttulate. Chlamydospores are small, thick, dark brown to black, spherical to irregular with smooth to rough surfaces. They may be terminal or intercalary, formed in chains (Nene and Reddy 1987). Disease spreads through infected seed from location to location.

Detection/indexing methods

  • at ICRISAT - Pre export field inspection and blotter test are used.
  • at ICARDA - Malt extract agar

Leaf spot symptoms on (D)pycnidia embeded in seed; (E)pycnidia; (F)mature picnidium releasing pycnidiospores and (G)pycnidiospores.(photos: ICRISAT)

Treatment/Control

  • at ICRISAT - Not available
  • at ICARDA - Use certified seed; disease resistant cultivars; crop rotation and spring burning when severe.

Procedures in case of positive test

  • at ICRISAT - Incineration of the infected crop and rejection of the infected seed samples.
  • at ICARDA - Seed treatments

References and further reading

Ahmed KM, Ravinder Reddy Ch.1993. A Pictorial guide to the identification of seed borne fungi of sorghum, pearl millet, finger millet, chickpea, pigeonpea and groundnut. Information Bulletin No. 34. Patancheru, A.P. 502 324 India: International Crops Research Institute for the semi-Arid Tropics. 200 pp.

Chakrabarty SK, Anitha K, Girish AG, Sarath Babu B, Prasada Rao RDVJ, Varaprasad KS, Khetarpal RK, Thakur RP. 2005. Germplasm exchange and quarantine of ICRISAT mandate crops. Information Bulletin No. 69. Rajendranagar 500 030, Andhra Pradesh, India: National Bureau of Plant Genetic Resources; and Patancheru 502 324, Andhra Pradesh, India: International Crops Research Institute for the Semi Arid Tropics. 80pp.

Haware MP, Nene YL. 1981. Phoma blight – a new disease of chickpea. Plant disease 65 : 282.

Nene YL, Reddy MV, Haware MP, Ganekar AM, Amin KS. 1991. Field diagnosis of chickpea diseases and their control. Information bulletin no. 28, Patancheru, A.P. 502 324 India: International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics, 52pp.

Nene YL, Reddy MV. 1987. Chickpea diseases and their control. Pages 233-270 in The Chickpea (Saxena MC and Singh KB, eds.) Wallingford, Oxon, UK: CAB International.

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Stemphylium leaf blight

Scientific name

Pleospora herbarum(Pers.) Rabenh., (1854) [teleomorph]
Anamorph: Stemphylium botryosum Rotem,Y. Cohen & I. Wahl, (1966)

Significance

It is reported to be seedborne

Symptoms

Spot-causing fungal disease occurring in leaf. The lesions are at first water-soaked small spots and then become blackish brown lesion divided by leaf veins. The lesions often extend from the leaf rim, fuse with the adjacent lesion, and become large. The leaf shrinks and withers in results. The diseased leaf defoliates at the early stage. The species of the causal organism is same with leaf spot fungi of alfalfa, but the pathogenicity is differentiated.

Hosts

On a wide range of hosts including apple, ash, broad bean, clover, endive, gladiolus, gramineae, lettuce, lupin, muskmelon, onion, Onobrychis, Medicago sativa, mangold, tomato, Trifolium, Vicia.

Geographic distribution

Worldwide; very common in temperate and sub-tropical regions.

Biology and transmission

Survival: The fungi are carried-over on infected plant debris (leaves and stems), seed and in the soil.

Environmental conditions: Stemphylium leaf spot may develop under warm moist conditions.

Dispersal: Spores of these fungi are spread by wind and rain splash. Generally air-borne as ascospores or conidia. These penetrate the leaf or petiole via stomata. May also occur on seeds and in soil.

Detection/indexing method in place at the CGIAR Center

  • at ICARDA - Blotter test, agar plate method
  • at ICRISAT - Not applicable

Treatment/control

Seed treatment. These diseases are usually not a problem after the end of the rainy season except in Valleys where they can cause damage up to harvest under conditions of high humidity and heavy night time dew. (ICARDA)

Procedure followed in case of positive test

  • at ICARDA - Seed treatment
  • at ICRISAT - Not applicable

References and further reading

http://nilgs.naro.affrc.go.jp/db/diseases/contents/de33.htm

http://www.dpi.vic.gov.au/dpi/nreninf.nsf/9e58661e880ba9e44a256c640023eb2e/7db6c28f86373415ca256f100022e673/$FILE/AG0727.pdf

http://www.cababstractsplus.org/abstracts/Abstract.aspx?AcNo=20056400150

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Dry root rot, Charcoal rot

Scientific name

Rhizoctonia bataticola(Taub.) Briton-Jones

Other scientific name

Macrophomina phaseolina(Tassi) Goid

Significance

Control measures include crop rotation, use of less susceptible varieties and hybrids, and pre-sowing treatment of seeds.

Symptoms

Charcoal rot is a disease of the soybean root and stem as well as other crops. Charcoal rot symptoms vary depending on the time of the year that the plant is infected. Usually charcoal rot is develops later in the season but it can cause a seedling disease since the roots of the plant can be infected anytime during the season. Infected seedlings show a reddish brown discoloration at the soil line extending up the stem that may turn dark brown to black. Foliage of infected seedlings can appear off-color or begin to dry out and turn brown. A twin-stemmed plant may develop if the fungus kills the growing point. Under cool, wet conditions young plants that are infected may survive but carry a latent infection that will express symptoms later in the season with hot, dry weather. In older soybeans symptoms of charcoal rot include early maturation, non-abscission of the leaves, chlorosis and failure to complete pod filling. Microsclerotia can be visible as black specks in the woody parts of the stems and roots. The microsclerotia are released into the soil as infected tissue decays.

Hosts

M. phaseolina infects over 500 plant species and has a wide geographic distribution. Major cultivated hosts include: Arachis hypogaea (peanut), Beta vulgarius, Brassica oleracea (Cabbage), Capsicum annuum (pepper), Cicer arietinum (chick pea), Citrus spp. Corchorus sp., Cucumis spp., Fargaria sp., Glycine Max (soybean), Gossypium sp., Helianthus annuus (sunflower), Ipomoea batatas (sweet potato), Medicago sativa (alfalfa), Phaseolus spp., Pinus spp., Prunus spp.,  Sesamum indicum (sesame), Solanum tuberosum (potato), Sorghum bicolor (sorghum), Vigna unguiculata (cowpea), and Zea mays (corn).

Geographic distribution

Australia, Ethiopia, India, Iran, Myanmar, Nepal, Pakistan, Turkey, USA.

Biology and transmission

M. phaseolina survives as microsclerotia in the soil and on infected plant debris. The microsclerotia serve as the primary source of inoculum and have been found to persist within the soil up to three years. The microsclerotia are black, spherical to oblong structures that are produced in the host tissue and released in to the soil as the infected plant decays. These multi-celled structures allow the persistence of the fungus under adverse conditions such as low soil nutrient levels and temperature above 30ْ C. Microsclerotial survival is greatly reduced in wet soils surviving no more than 7 to 8 weeks and mycelium no more than 7 days. Seeds may also carry the fungus in the seed coat. Infected seed do not germinate or produce seedlings that die soon after emergence.

Germination of the microsclerotia occurs throughout the growing season when temperatures are between 28 and 35 C. Microsclerotia germinate on the root surface, germ tubes form appresoria that penetrate the host epidermal cell walls by mechanical pressure and enzymatic digestion or through natural openings. The hyphae grow first intercellularly in the cortex and then intracellularly through the xylem colonizing the vascular tissue. Once in the vascular tissue M. phaseolina spreads through the taproot and lower stem of the plant producing microsclerotia that plug the vessels. The rate of infection increases with higher soil temperatures and low soil moisture will further enhance disease severity. Hot, dry weather promotes infection and development of charcoal rot.

In soybean charcoal rot is a greater problem after anthesis and often occurs when the plant is under drought stress. M. phaseolina can grow and produce large amounts of microsclerotia under relatively low water potentials allowing this disease to be recognized as favoring drought. The mechanical plugging of the xylem vessels by microsclerotia, toxin production, enzymatic action, and mechanical pressure during penetration lead to disease development. The population of M. phaseolina in soil will increase when susceptible hosts are cropped in successive years and can be redistributed by tillage practices.

Detection/indexing method in place at the CGIAR Center

  • at ICARDA - Agar plate method (PDA)
  • at ICRISAT -Agar plate method

Treatment/control

  • Fields having the history of severe incidence may be avoided.
  • Deep ploughing of chickpea fields to bury debris. 
  • Use clean certified seeds treated with PCNB and Thiram (1:1) @ 2.5 gm/kg of seeds.
  • Practice crop rotation with wheat and oat which helps in reduction of inoculum. 
  • Sowing should be done on rows with wider spacing. 
  • Use resistant varieties

Procedure followed at the centers in case of positive test

  • at ICARDA -Crop rotation, agronomy practices, seed treatment
  • at ICRISAT -Not applicable

References and further reading

http://www.cals.ncsu.edu/course/pp728/Macrophomina/macrophominia_phaseolinia.HTM

http://www.jnkvv.nic.in/IPM%20Project/disease-chickpea.html

http://www.ncipm.org.in/chickpea%20root%20rot.htm

http://www.icrisat.org/vasat/learning_resources/chickpea/chickpea_diseases/fungal_rs_dryrootrot.htm

Dry root rot (photo: www.icrisat.org)

 

Dry root rot (photo: www.ncipm.org.in)

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Stemphylium blight

Scientific name

Stemphylium sarciniforme (Cavara) Wiltshire 1938

Other scientific name

Macrosporium sarciniforme Cavara 1890

Significance

Seedborne.

Symptoms

Irregular, light brown lesions on the leaves, stems, and pods have dark margins.

Seeds from infected pods are discolored and shrivelled.

Lesions on the leaflets consist of roughly ovoid necrotic spots. The spots are dark brown at the center with a broad gray border.

Minute, dark brown, elongated spots also develop on the stems.

Stemphylium blight (photo: www.icrisat.org)

Hosts

Cicer arietinum (chickpea), clover (trifolium).

Geographic distribution

Widespread: Africa, Asia, Australia, Europe, North and South America.

Biology and transmission

Excessive vegetative growth, high humidity, and cool weather (15-20C) favour disease development.

Usually affects the crop from the flowering stage onwards.   

Detection/indexing method in place at the CGIAR Center

  • at ICARDA -Blotter test
  • at ICRISAT -Not applicable

Treatment

A minor disease and does not require any specific control measure.

Procedure followed at the centers in case of positive test

  • Seed treatment (ICARDA)

References and further reading

http://www.cababstractsplus.org/abstracts/Abstract.aspx?AcNo=20056400671

http://www.icrisat.org/vasat/learning_resources/chickpea/chickpea_diseases/fungal_aerial_stemphylium.htm

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Nematodes (chickpea)

Contributors to this page: ICRISAT, Patancheru, India (RP Thakur, AG Girish, VP Rao).

Best practices for safe transfer of chickpea germplasm

Contributors to this page: ICRISAT, India (RP Thakur, AG Girish, VP Rao).

Best practices in place at ICRISAT

For the most recent practices relating to phytosanitary standards and protocols used at ICRISAT to test seed germplasm see the following reference:

Chakrabarty, SK, K. Anitha, AG Girish, B Sarath Babu, RDVJ Prasad Rao, KS Varaprasad, PK Khetarpal and RP Thakur. 2005. Germplasm exchange and quarantine of ICRISAT mandate crops. Information Bulletin 69.  Rajendranagar 500 030, Andra Pradesh, India. National Bureau of Plant Genetic Resources, Pantacharu 502 324, Andra Pradesh, India. International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics (ICRISAT). 

Seed health testing protocol at ICRISAT-PQL for import 

 

Seed health testing protocol at ICRISAT-PQL for export



 

Insects - chickpea

Contributors to this page: ICRISAT, India (RP Thakur, AG Girish, VP Rao); ICARDA, Syria (Siham Asaad, Abdulrahman Moukahal).

Contents:
Stored grain pest
Cowpea seed beetle, Adzuki bean seed beetle
Khapra beetle

Stored grain pest

Scientific name

Callosobruchus analis Fabricius.

Other scientific names

Bruchus analis, Bruchus glaber, Bruchus jekelii, Bruchus obliquus, Bruchus ciceri,
Callosobruchus glaber, Callosobruchus jekelii.

Importance

Medium.

Significance

Infested chickpea lose their viability and are unfit for human consumption. In Africa, Asia, and Oceania, C. analis is considered a pest of economic importance for stored-legume grains (Southgate 1979).

Symptoms

Chickpea pods are seldom infested in the field. The pests attack nearly mature and dried pods during storage. The round exit hole and the white eggs on the pod wall are clearly visible. Infested stored seed can be recognized by the eggs on the seed surface and the round exit holes with the ‘flap’ of seed coat.

Stored Grain Pest  (photo:www.invasive.org)

Damaged grains with white eggs and floppy windows (photo: ICRISAT)

Hosts

Cicer arietinum (chickpea), Cajanus cajan (pigeonpea) and other grain legumes.

Geographic distribution

Callosobruchus analis is widespread in Asia.

Biology and transmission

Adults are small, 3 mm long brown beetles with black spots on the elytra. Eggs are laid on the seed surface. Larvae feed and pupate entirely within the seed. One generation is completed in 4-5 weeks (Ranga Rao and Shanower 1999).

Detection/indexing methods used in CGIAR

  • At ICRISAT - Dry seed examination and X-ray radiography are used for detection of the bruchides.
  • At ICARDA - Visual and microscopic inspection.

Treatment/control

  • At ICRISAT
    • Fumigation with methyl bromide by 32 g/m3 for 4 hrs followed by seed treatment with chlorpyriphos 3 g/kg-1 seed (Ghanekar et al. 1996).
  • At ICARDA
    • Cleanliness in storage: stores should be cleaned from all residues of grains, straw and flour and be de-infested by spraying walls with malathion,
    • Sacks, thresher and transportation vehicles also should be cleaned.
    • Seeds stored for food/feed can be fumigated with phospine (Phostoxine). Seeds stored for planting can be treated with insecticides such as Actellic at 4-10 ppm a.i. (0.5 g/kg seed) or malathion at 10 ppm a.i., which will protect the seeds for several months.


Procedures in CGIAR in case of positive test

  • At ICRISAT - Removal of the infested seeds followed by the seed treatment with chloropyriphos at 3 g/kg-1 seed.
  • At ICARDA - Fumigation.

References and further reading

Chakrabarty SK, Anitha K, Girish AG, Sarath Babu B, Prasada Rao RDVJ, Varaprasad KS, Khetarpal RK, Thakur RP. 2005. Germplasm exchange and quarantine of ICRISAT mandate crops. Information Bulletin No. 69. Rajendranagar 500 030, Andhra Pradesh, India: National Bureau of Plant Genetic Resources; and Patancheru 502 324, Andhra Pradesh, India: International Crops Research Institute for the Semi Arid Tropics. 80pp.

Ghanekar AM, Ranga Rao GV, Murthy KS, Surender A, Shaik Babu Saheb. 1996. Seed protectants for healthy exports. Indian Journal of Plant Protection 24: 37-43.

Ranga Rao GV, Shanower TG. 1999. Identification and Management of Pigeonpea and Chickpea Insects Pests in Asia. Information Bulletin No. 57, Patancheru, 502 324, A.P., India: International Crops Research Institute for the Semi Arid Tropics. 96pp.

Southgate BJ. 1979. Biology of the Bruchidae. Annual Review of Entomology 24:449-473.

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Cowpea seed beetle, Adzuki bean seed beetle

Scientific names

Callosobruchus maculatus (Fabricius), 1775;
and
C. chinensis (L.), 1758.

Significance

The Callosobruchus beetles are principally a serious pest of products stored under hot dry conditions; complete destruction of grain and pulses may occur in a short time. In humid climates, the its competitors are so much greater that it has difficulty in establishing itself.

Symptoms/damage

At the larval stage the beetles tunnel into and develop within the beans. They may consume nearly the entire bean content. Pupation occurs within the beans and adults emerge through a round hole in the seed coat. Damage is caused by a combination of the feeding and contamination.

Hosts

The Callosobruchus beetles attack several legumes in storage, chickpea (Cicer arietinum), arhar (Cajanus cajan), green gram (Vigna radiata), pea (Pisum sativum) and kidney bean (Phaseolus vulgaris) seeds. On lentil, C. chinensis is the most common.

Geographic distribution

Both species are widespread and found in all continents with subtropical or tropical conditions (USA, Mediterranean, India and Australia).

Biology and transmission

The eggs are glued to the bean or the pod. On hatching the larvae bores into the seed where it makes a translucent 'window' in the seed before pupating. The larval and pupal stages are spent inside the bean. The adult emerges through the 'window' leaving a neat round hole. Infestations can begin in the field. Adults move to bean fields from trash beans left in sacks, harvesters, planters, or feed areas. The cowpea weevil readily attacks dried beans; thus this weevil can be a serious storage pest. Bean weevil infestations can also start in the field and may also originate from trash beans. As with the cowpea weevil, the bean weevil will attack dried beans and can be a serious pest in stored beans. Broad bean weevil infestations also start in the field, but this pest is not a storage problem.

Detection/indexing methods in place at the CGIAR Centres

  • At ICRISAT - Dry seed examination and X-ray radiography are used for detection of the bruchides.
  • At ICARDA -Visual and microscopic inspection.

Treatment/control

  • At ICRISAT
    • Fumigation with methyl bromide by 32 g/m3 for 4 hr followed by seed treatment with chlorpyriphos 3 g/kg-1 seed.
  • At ICARDA
    • Cleanliness in storage: stores should be cleaned from all residues of grains, straw and flour and be de-infested by spraying walls with malathion; sacks, thresher and transportation vehicles should also be cleaned.
    • Seeds stored for food/feed can be fumigated with phospine (Phostoxine).  Seeds stored for planting can be treated with insecticides such as Actellic at 4-10 ppm a.i. (0.5 g/kg seed) or malathion at 10 ppm a.i., which will protect the seeds for several months.

Procedures in place within the CGIAR Centres in case of positive test

  • At ICRISAT - Removal of the infested seeds followed by seed treatment with chloropyriphos at 3 g/kg-1 seed.
  • At ICARDA - Fumigation.

References and further reading

http://www.icarda.org/Publications/Field_Guides/Lentil/Lentil.htm#Lent7.Html

http://www.infonet-biovision.org/default/ct/82/pests

http://agspsrv34.agric.wa.gov.au/Ento/pestweb/Query1_1.idc?ID=-1771861620

http://www.zin.ru/Animalia/coleoptera/rus/calmacdk.htm

http://www.infonet-biovision.org/default/ct/82/pests

http://agspsrv34.agric.wa.gov.au/ento/icdb/speciescompspec.idc?mnuorder=Coleoptera&mnufamily=Chrysomelidae&mnugenus=Callosobruchus

Callosobruchus maculatus (photo: infonet-biovision.org)

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Khapra beetle

Scientific name

Trogoderma granarium Everts.

Other scientific names

Trogoderma afrum, Trogoderma khapra, Trogoderma quinquefasciata.

Importance

High.

Significance

Trogoderma granarium is a serious pest of stored products under hot dry conditions. Established infestations are difficult to control because of the beetle's ability to live without food for long periods of time and to survive on foods of low moisture content, its habit of crawling into tiny cracks and crevices and remaining there for long periods, and its relative tolerance to many surface insecticides and fumigants.

Symptoms

The Khapra beetle is one of the world's most feared stored product pests. The obvious signs of a Khapra beetle infestation are the larvae and cast skins. Larvae and adults are best identified by microscopic examination. Larvae are most likely to be seen just before dusk, since they are more active at that time (Anonymous 1981).

Khapra beetle (from: agspsrv34.agric.wa.gov.au)

Host

Larvae feed on a wide variety of stored products and dried foods. They prefer whole grain and cereal products such as Triticum aestivum (wheat), Hordeum vulgare (barley), and Oryza sativa (rice), but larvae have been recorded on the following: Avena spp. (oats)), Secale spp. (rye), Zea mays (corn), dried blood, dried milk, fishmeal, Arachis hypogea (ground nuts), flour, bran, malt, Linum usitatissimum (flax seed), Medicago sativa (alfalfa seed), Lycopersicum esculantus (tomato seed), Phaseolus vulgaris (pinto beans), Vigna unguiculata (blackeyed cowpeas), Sorghum bicolor (sorghum seed) and many other food products (Lindgren and Vincent 1959; Lindgren et al. 1955).

Geographic distribution

The distribution of khapra beetle extends from Mayanmar (Burma) to West Africa and is limited by the 35° parallel to the north and the equator to the south. It has been introduced by commerce into some areas of similar climatic conditions (Anonymous 1981). The Khapra beetle is found in all continents where grain and grain products are stored.

Biology and transmission

The adults are oblong-oval beetles, approximately 1.6 to 3.0 mm long and 0.9 to 1.7 mm wide. Males are brown to black with indistinct reddish-brown markings on elytra. Females are slightly larger than males and lighter in colour. The head is small and deflexed with a short 11-segmented antenna. The antennae have a club of three to five segments, which fit into a groove in the side of the pronotum. The adults are covered with hairs. The eggs are milky white, turning pale yellow with age, cylindrical, 0.7  0.25 mm, one end rounded, the other pointed and bearing spine-like projections. Larvae are uniformly yellowish-white, except head and body hairs that are brown. As the larvae increase in size, their body colour changes to a golden or reddish-brown, more body hairs develop, and the tail becomes proportionally shorter. Mature larvae are approximately 6 mm long and 1.5 mm wide. Adult Khapra beetles have wings, but apparently do not fly and feed very little. Mated females live from four to seven days, unmated females from 20 to 30 days, and males from 7 to 12 days. Mating occurs about five days after emergence, and egg laying begins almost immediately at 40°C. Egg laying may begin at one to three days at cooler temperatures, but no eggs are produced at 20°C. Eggs hatch in 3 to 14 days after the female lays an average of 50 to 90 eggs that are loosely scattered in the host material. Complete development from egg to adult can occur within 26 to 220 days, depending upon temperature. Optimum temperature for development is 35°C. If the temperature falls below 25°C for a period of time or if larvae are very crowded, they may enter diapauses. They can survive temperatures below -8°C. In diapauses, the larvae can moult but are inactive and may remain in this condition for many years (Anonymous 1981).

Larvae of Trogoderma granarium and damaged grains (photo: agspsrv34.agric.wa.gov.au)

Detection/indexing methods used in the CGIAR Centres

  • At ICRISAT -  Dry seed examination using magnifying lens.

Treatment/control

High concentrations of fumigant (Aluminium phosphide) are maintained during the fumigation period to allow penetration into all cracks and crevices. In an eradication programme, both fumigants and surface treatment (chloropyriphos) are used in combination with preventive measures, e.g., good sanitation practices and exclusion.

Procedure followed in the CGIAR Centres in case of positive test

  • At ICRISAT -  Rejection and incineration of the infested seed samples.

EPPO protocols

EPPO A2 list: No.121.

Control. Methyl bromide fumigation gives good control for a wide range of commodities. Effective control in the structure of buildings and ships requires high concentrations maintained over the fumigation period to enable the gas to penetrate into cracks and crevices. A list of dosage schedules may be found in EPPO quarantine procedure No. 12 (OEPP/EPPO 1982). Phosphine can also be used against T. granarium; dosage schedules are given by OEPP/EPPO (1984). In India, the use of deoiled neem (Azadirachta indica) seed powder mixed into wheat was found to be an effective and cheap method to control the pest in stored wheat (Singh and Kataria 1986). The use of carbon dioxide was also reported to be effective in India (Srivastava 1985). As an alternative to the fumigation of cereals with methyl bromide or other pesticides, the use of a heat treatment has been reported to be very effective against the Khapra beetle (Fleurat-Lessard 1985). An exposure to 60°C for 30 min resulted in 100% mortality of all stages of T. granarium (Ismail et al. 1988).

Phytosanitary risk. T. granarium is an A2 quarantine organism for EPPO (OEPP/EPPO 1981), and is also of quarantine concern for CPPC, COSAVE, JUNAC, NAPPO and OIRSA. The continued occurrence of T. granarium on produce imported from countries where it is indigenous, and the potential for spread due to increasing use of dry cargo containers and roll-on roll-off road transport, make it a continued threat to EPPO countries. This not only applies to the risk of establishment in heated buildings in areas of unfavourable climate, but also to parts of Greece, Italy, Spain and Russia on the fringes of the natural range, where it is not known to be established. A minimum period of four months with an average temperature of 20°C is considered necessary for T. granarium to be a threat. In addition, it should be recalled that other continents take severe measures against T. granarium; the presence of the pest in an EPPO country would be a significant additional constraint to its export.

Phytosanitary measures. EPPO (OEPP/EPPO 1990) recommends that it is preferable not to require a Phytosanitary Certificate for stored products, but rather to inspect consignments on import and take appropriate post-entry action, for example treatment following EPPO Quarantine Procedures Nos 12 or 18 (OEPP/EPPO 1982; 1984).

References and further reading

Anonymous. 1981. Data sheets on quarantine organisms. Trogoderma granarium Everts. European and Mediterranean Plant Protection Organization Bulletin 11 (1) Set 4, List A2, 1-6 pp. 

Fleurat-Lessard F. 1985. Les traitements thermiques de desinfestation des cereals et des produits céréaliers: possibilité d'utilisation pratique et domaine d'application. Bulletin OEPP/EPPO 15:109-118.

Ismail AY, Abid SH, Mawlood N.A. 1988. Effect of high temperature on the mortality of the red flour beetle Tribolium confusum and khapra beetle Trogoderma granarium. Zanco 1:35-42.

Lindgren DL, Vincent LE. 1959. Biology and control of Trogoderma granarium Everts. Journal of Economic Entomology 52:312-319.

Lindgren DL, Vincent LE, Krohne HE. 1955. The khapra beetle, Trogoderma granarium Everts. Hilgardia 24:1-36.

OEPP/EPPO. 1990. Specific quarantine requirements. EPPO Technical Documents No. 1008.

OEPP/EPPO. 1984. Quarantine procedures No.18. Phosphine fumigation of stored products. Bulletin OEPP/EPPO Bulletin 14:598-599.

OEPP/EPPO. 1982. Quarantine procedures No.12. Methyl bromide fumigation of stored products. Bulletin OEPP/EPPO Bulletin 12 (Special issue on EPPO recommendations on fumigation standards): 30-31.

OEPP/EPPO. 1981. Data sheets on quarantine organisms No. 121, Trogoderma granarium. Bulletin OEPP/EPPO Bulletin 11(1).

Singh RP, Kataria PK. 1986. Deoiled neem kernel powder as protectant of wheat seeds against Trogoderma granarium Everts. Indian Journal of Entomology 48:119-120.

Srivastava JL. 1985. Use of controlled atmosphere for the control of stored product insects. In: Behavioural and physiological approaches in pest management (Ed. by Regupathy, A.; Jayaraj, S.), pp. 202-207. Coimbatore, Tamil Nadu, India.

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