Knowledgebase
What is happening to my amaranth? #879960
Asked August 02, 2024, 5:22 PM EDT
Baltimore County Maryland
Expert Response
Are you a cut flower or greenhouse business, or just a home hobbyist? We ask because, if you are a business, you may be able to get samples tested (for confirmation of disease) by area plant diagnostic labs while UMD's lab is temporarily closed. Similarly, you can subscribe to the greenhouse/cut flower IPM alerts, and work with Extension Agents that specialize in plant pest, disease, and nutrition issues which work with commercial growers.
Miri
Alana
With UMD's plant pathology lab closed until a new lab director can be hired to replace the person that retired, labs in surrounding states are graciously offering to test samples on our behalf, though they may charge a fee comparable to what in-state residents of those areas would be charged. Even if you bring a sample for diagnosis to your local Extension office, the specialists or agents there still might need to send some samples out to a testing lab for confirmation of a diagnosis for certain pathogens, especially when it comes to plant viruses. (There is no testing lab at the field offices; it was only on campus.) Not every lab has test kits for every plant virus (there are many, and tests can be costly), so contact the lab prior to sending samples if you suspect a certain virus, to make sure they would be able to confirm its presence.
That said, viruses on Dahlias can be very common, and from a cut flower business perspective, probably don't need to be confirmed via testing, as symptomatic plants should be removed (especially if the tuber crop is replanted yearly anyway, as is common). Viral infection won't always affect flower production or quality, so in that sense, might not be that serious of a disease to manage.
Another possibility to the Sclerotinia diagnosis is Southern Blight, since the former fungus is more common early in the season and the latter more common this time of year, since it is highly heat-tolerant. Both can have a very wide host plant range, meaning they are capable of infecting many species of plants. For Southern Blight, cultivating the soil of a bed with the infected plants removed can bury the sclerotia (spore structures) deep enough that they are unlikely to re-infect a new crop. An issue with Sclerotinia might need a different resolution, though, so check with Extension plant pathologists that work with businesses and/or the testing lab once they confirm which pathogen is responsible.
Miri