Bacterial leaf
streak (BLS), a foliar disease of corn caused by the bacterium
Xanthomonas vasicola pv. vasculorum, was reported in the US for the
first time in Nebraska and has since been found in several other states
out west, including Kansas, Colorado, Iowa, Illinois, Minnesota, South
Dakota, Texas and Oklahoma. It has not yet been found in Ohio and
neighboring states.
Bacterial Leaf |
BLS has a very close
resemblance to other common foliar diseases of corn such as gray leaf
spot (GLS). Like GLS, it is characterized by the presence of
rectangular-looking lesions on the leaf that are tan, brown, or orange
in color. However, lesions of BLS have less well-defined margins and may
be narrower and longer than those of GLS. But one of the biggest
differences between lesions of BLS and those of GLS is that BLS lesions
have wavy margins with a yellow halo that is easily seen when leaves are
held up against the light – there is a “windowpane” (translucent)
aspect to BLS lesions. Although very early GLS lesions are also
translucent when observed against the light, mature lesions are not. BLS
lesions first appear on the lower leaves, later moving up the plant,
and may occur singly or in clusters, eventually expanding and damaging
huge sections of the leaf.
Being a new disease,
there are still lots of unanswered questions about BLS, such as how and
when it infects the corn plant, how it spreads within and between
fields, whether or not it is seedborne, hybrid
resistance/susceptibility, its survival from one growing season to
another, its impact on grain yield, and the efficacy of tillage and crop
rotation as possible management strategies.
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