| Characteristic Symptoms: | |
|  | Symptoms of southern corn leaf blight depends on what race of the pathogen is present. | 
|  | Race 0 is common in sub-tropical and tropical areas. | 
|  | Spots of Race O are tan in color with brown borders. | 
|  | Lesions begin as small, diamond-shaped lesions and elongate within the veins to become larger and rectangular. | 
|  | Race O's lesions remain within the leaves of the maize plant. | 
|  | Lesion size ranges from 2 to 6 millimeters wide and 3 to 22 millimeters long. | 
| Conditions for Disease Development: | |
|  | The fungus overwinters in corn debris and on seed. | 
|  | Wind and splashing water spread the spores rapidly in the field under ideal conditions. | 
|  | SCLB disease is prevalent in hot and humid corn growing areas. | 
|  | B. polaris requires slightly higher temperatures for infection than H. turcicum | 
| Management and Control: | |
|  | Use resistant varieties, if available. | 
|  | Crop rotate with non-host to reduce corn residues and disease inoculum. | 
|  | Apply fungicides such as pyraclostrobin+dimetomorph (e.g. Cabrio®), azoxystrobin (e.g. Amistar®) or propiconazole (e.g. Bumper®, Tranzole ®). | 
| References: | |
| https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Southern_corn_leaf_blight | |
| The CIMMYT Maize Program. 2003. Maize Diseases: A Guide for Field Identification. 4th edition. Mexico, D.F.: International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center (CIMMYT). | |
To view other diseases, click here.
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