Skip to Search
Skip to main content
United States
Home
Company
History
Varieties
Commercial Contacts
Sugarbeet Diseases
Industry Links
Feedback
United States
Sugarbeet Diseases
Powdery Mildew
Powdery Mildew
Erysiphe polygoni
Identification
Powdery Mildew is a foliar disease caused by a fungus
Found in warm-dry climates of the Western US
Can occur in all sugar beet growing areas of the US, but overwintering structures are temperature sensitive and short-lived, therefore the
disease is most common in areas with a temperate winter climate
Detection
Starts as small radiating, whitish, dusty mats on older leaves of the plant
Under ideal conditions, the foliage can be covered in a few days
Optimum temperatures is between 56° and 86° F
Growth is inhibited by free water on the foliage, so the spread is less under sprinklers
A field of heavily infected plants may take on a bluish cast
Cause of Damage
The foliar mildew covers the leaf and hinders the plants ability to conduct photosynthesis
Reduced photosynthesis reduces growth and sugar production
Reduction of sugar and tonnage may be up to 30%
Control
Resistant varieties
Fungicides and sulfur applications
If disease appears less then 5 weeks before harvest, a control may not be needed
Crop rotation is unimportant since the disease cannot overwinter in dead tissue
Aphanomyces Root Rot
Beet Curly Top
Cercospora Leaf Spot
Cyst Nematode
Erwinia
Fusarium Yellows and Root Rot
Powdery Mildew
Rhizoctonia Root and Crown Rot
Rhizomania
Sugarbeet Root Aphid