Cooperative Extension Service
The University of Georgia College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences
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Alfredo Martinez, Extension Plant Pathologist
James Buck, Plant Pathologist, Department of Plant Pathology - Griffin Campus
Botrytis
Blight
Root Rot by Pythium or Rhizoctonia
Bacterial Blight
Leaf Rust
Tomato Spotted Wilt and Impatiens Necrotic Spot Viruses
Alternaria and Cercospora Leaf Spots
Abiotic Diseases -- Oedema
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| Figure 1. Geranium flowers. Photo: Alfredo Martinez |
Geraniums (genus Pelargonium and Geranium) continue to be some of the most popular plants in Georgia landscapes, home gardens and indoor settings. Geraniums display vivacious and showy leaves with clusters of vibrantly colored flowers.
Their reliable and long-lasting flowers are well suited for formal beds and for nonstop color in hanging baskets and window boxes and as ground covers. Geraniums show great variation in leaf, flower and growth characteristics. They may vary in height from 6 inches to several feet, depending on the variety and the care given to the plants. Many types are available. Some geraniums for landscapes and home and garden use include:
Common Garden Geraniums (Pelargonium X hortorum) usually have distinct leaf markings. They include selections with tri-colored leaves, silver leaves, leaves with white markings, and fancy-leaved geraniums. Flower colors are usually pink, red and/or white.
Ivy-Leafed Geraniums (P. peltatum or Pelargonium X domesticum) are trailing in habit and have leaves that resemble ivy leaves. They are commonly used in hanging baskets and window boxes.
Scented-Leafed Geraniums (Geranium spp.) are prized for their leaf aroma. Scents include lemon, rose, peppermint, nutmeg and others. Many have deeply lobed leaves.
Symptoms can develop at any stage and on any plant part. (Figures 2 and 3) Under conditions of high moisture and humidity, infected plant tissues and debris develop the diagnostic gray, fuzzy growth characteristic of the fungus Botrytis cinerea. The symptoms on leaves vary from distinct spots or lesions to large dead areas, often with concentric rings. V-shaped lesions can also develop. Lesions often occur when spent flower petals fall onto the leaves. Symptoms on stems appear at the base of plants as light- to dark-brown lesions. These lesions grow until they rot the entire stem. Plants can develop brown lesions after cuttings are taken. Flowers can turn brown and drop prematurely during periods of high moisture and relative humidity. Senescing flowers are covered with a gray, fuzzy mass.
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| Figure 2. Geranium flowers showing Botrytis blight symptoms. Photo: Daren Muller | Figure 3. Geranium leaves showing Botrytis blight symptoms. Photo: Daren Muller |
Root and stem rots cause yellowing, stunting and wilting of the above-ground portions of the plant. Plants often have a noticeable brown to black lesion at the soil line, since the fungi attack and girdle the plant. Under wet, humid conditions, a gray or off-white webby growth can be seen on the infected plants. Rhizoctonia-caused root rots also include damping-off, and tissue or leaves that touch the infected soil will develop a brown cobweb growth; leaves will turn brown and rot. Roots may have distinct lesions; large parts of the root system are often decayed. Root lesions appear water-soaked, glassy, brown and shriveled.
The disease is caused by the bacterial pathogen Xanthomonas campestris pv. Pelargonii. Symptoms on leaves include small distinct, water-soaked or brown and V-shaped spots first visible on the under-surfaces. Some leaves develop distinctly darkened veins and wilt at the leaf margins. When infection is systemic, the entire plant becomes flaccid, and branches wilt and die back. Stems blacken and shrivel into a dry rot. Infected young plants fail to root properly and slowly rot from the base upward. Stems become dull black-brown. Plants with systemic infection collapse and die. Systemically infected ivy geraniums don't wilt, but they develop symptoms that can be confused with nutritional or insect problems. (Figure 4)
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| Figure 4.
Bacterial Leaf Spot symptoms. Photo: Alfredo Martinez |
Leaf rust, caused by the fungal pathogen Puccinia pelargonii-zonalis, is characterized by small yellow spots on the upper surface of the leaf and rust-colored pustules that develop in the spots on the underside of the leaf. The pustules break open and release spores. Spores are often formed in a circular fashion around the original pustule. When infection is severe, leaves become yellow and drop prematurely. Pustules containing the rust-colored spores can be seen on stems, petioles and stipules. The disease is more common in greenhouse production, but it is a potentially important disease in the landscape. (Figure 5)
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| Figure 5.
Leaf rust symptoms. Photo: Alfredo Martinez |
Symptoms of these viruses are highly variable and include stunting, ringspots, and sunken purple-brown lesions on leaves, stems and petioles. The symptoms vary with plant age, physiological condition, level of infestation and timing.
Alternaria leaf spots are small and blister-like, and appear on the undersides of older leaves. Mature spots become sunken and brown with diffuse yellow halos. If conditions remain suitable for disease development, the spots are apparent on upper leaf surfaces as well, and lesions show concentric rings. Chlorosis and defoliation occur when infection is severe.
Cercospora leaf spots appear as small, pale, sunken lesions that later turn gray and produce many spores. This gives an appearance of dark, raised centers. Cholorosis may be seen close to the lesions, and defoliation also occurs when infection is severe.
Oedema is considered a water imbalance that develops during periods of cool, cloudy weather or when the soil is moist and warm and the air is moist and cool.
First appears a chlorotic spots on the upper leaf surface. These develop into water-soaked blisters on the undersides of leaves that later become corky and rusty-brown. The entire leaf may turn yellow, die and drop off. Oedema can sometimes mimic bacterial blight. it is most serious on ivy geraniums.
Circular 863/July, 2003
The University of Georgia and Ft. Valley State University, the U.S. Department of Agriculture and counties of the state cooperating. The Cooperative Extension Service, the University of Georgia College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences offers educational programs, assistance and materials to all people without regard to race, color, national origin, age, sex or disability.
An Equal Opportunity Employer/Affirmative Action Organization Committed to a Diverse Work Force
Issued in furtherance of Cooperative Extension work, Acts of May 8 and June 30, 1914, The University of Georgia College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences and the U.S. Department of Agriculture cooperating.
Gale A. Buchanan, Dean and Director