Powdery scab

Powdery scab

Rhizaria, Phytomyxea

Latin name : Spongospora subterranea

Powdery scab
Powdery scab
Powdery scab
Powdery scab

Diagnostic characters for visual diagnosis

  • Purplish-brown pustules, usually circular, of 0.2 to 5 mm in diameter, but sometime wider and deeper, initially developping  on tuber surface and extending under the periderm to form raised lesions
  • The lesions become filled up with a dry, powdery mass of sporeballs
    At maturity, these lesions release the spore balls and become partly or entirely empty
  • As pustule bursts and reveals powdery sporeballs, small flaps of loose skin remain at the edge of the lesion
  • Sometime, atypical symptoms with brown necrotic tissues may be observed under the periderm
  • Lesions can expand in both directions, depth and width, to form deeply eroded cankers and outgrowths that induce mishapened tubers
  • Roots and stolons of the plant can be infected leading to the development of white galls (turning black when exposed to the air) of 1 to 10 mm in diameter

                                                                                                                                                                                          

POWDERY SCAB 180
powdery micro 180

Notes on confirmatory diagnostics

  •  Microscopic observation:
    • Place the powder scraped from the lesions  on a microscope slide with cotton blue, and observe the presence of typical sporeballs, at 10 and 40X magnification.

                                                                                                         

powdery scab 5.180

Specific references:

Bouchek-Mechiche et al  (2011). European Journal of Plant pathology, 131, 277–287

Merz U & Faloon RE (2009). Potato Research 52, 17-37

Van de Graaf et al (2003). European Journal of Plant Pathology, 109, 589-597

http://www.spongospora.ethz.ch/

Possible confusing symptoms :

Common scab

Skin spot

Modification date : 30 May 2023 | Publication date : 25 February 2013 | Redactor : K. Bouchek-Mechiche & Stuart Wale