Identification Symptoms
- Moist weather and splattering
rains are conducive to disease development. Most outbreaks of the disease
can be traced back to heavy rainstorms that occur in the area.
- Infected leaves show small,
brown, water soaked, circular spots surrounded with yellowish halo.
- On older plants the leaflet
infection is mostly on older leaves and may cause serious defoliation.
- The most striking symptoms are
on the green fruit. Small, water-soaked spots first appear which later
become raised and enlarge until they are one-eighth to one-fourth inch in
diameter.
- Centers of these lesions become
irregular, light brown and slightly sunken with a rough, scabby surface.
- Ripe fruits are not susceptible
to the disease. Surface of the seed becomes contaminated with the
bacteria, remaining on the seed surface for some time.
- The organism survives in
alternate hosts, on volunteer tomato plants and on infected plant debris.