The 'mechanics' of blight. What is actually happening in its spread?
Lots of interesting stuff here, and we all accept that blight is a fungus that spreads from plant to plant via the spores landing on and infecting the leaves... or does it? And that it is worse in wet and damp conditions, and more likely to infect crowded plants?
I watched a You Tube video yesterday in which it was claimed that as blight spreads UP the plant, the infection starts near the bottom. Our observations would confirm this as lower leaves are affected first and then the top ones last, in tomatoes, though with potatoes it doesn't follow the same pattern.
How does the fungus arrive? Some say in the rain and wind from other infections, but why do people claim you should burn the plants so it doesn't remain in the soil? Why should we destroy the 'volunteers' from tubers left in the ground? Often these make healthy plants and how would the fungus spread from these growing plants to our new plantings, especially if they are many metres away? If the fungus is in the soil, why doesn't it infect ALL our plants of this family regardless of weather conditions?
And why aren't tomatoes growing in the greenhouse infected with blight by the soil when we have grown tomatoes in there year after year?
As I say, the actual mechanics of the spread of blight seem very strange to me and I have yet to see it adequately explained. If we understood it better we might be able to prevent it more easily.
Lots of interesting stuff here, and we all accept that blight is a fungus that spreads from plant to plant via the spores landing on and infecting the leaves... or does it? And that it is worse in wet and damp conditions, and more likely to infect crowded plants?
I watched a You Tube video yesterday in which it was claimed that as blight spreads UP the plant, the infection starts near the bottom. Our observations would confirm this as lower leaves are affected first and then the top ones last, in tomatoes, though with potatoes it doesn't follow the same pattern.
How does the fungus arrive? Some say in the rain and wind from other infections, but why do people claim you should burn the plants so it doesn't remain in the soil? Why should we destroy the 'volunteers' from tubers left in the ground? Often these make healthy plants and how would the fungus spread from these growing plants to our new plantings, especially if they are many metres away? If the fungus is in the soil, why doesn't it infect ALL our plants of this family regardless of weather conditions?
And why aren't tomatoes growing in the greenhouse infected with blight by the soil when we have grown tomatoes in there year after year?
As I say, the actual mechanics of the spread of blight seem very strange to me and I have yet to see it adequately explained. If we understood it better we might be able to prevent it more easily.
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