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The variety of symptoms, the internal and external expressions of disease, that result from any disease form the symptom complex, which, together with the accompanying signs, makes up the syndrome of the disease.

Generalized symptoms may be classified as local or systemic, primary or secondary, and microscopic or macroscopic. Local symptoms are physiological or structural changes within a limited area of host tissue, such as leaf spots, galls, and cankers. Systemic symptoms are those involving the reaction of a greater part or all of the plant, such as wilting, yellowing, and dwarfing. Primary symptoms are the direct result of pathogen activity on invaded tissues (e.g., swollen “clubs” in clubroot of cabbage and “galls” formed by feeding of the root knot nematode). Secondary symptoms result from the physiological effects of disease on distant tissues and uninvaded organs (e.g., wilting and drooping of cabbage leaves in hot weather resulting from clubroot or root knot). Microscopic disease symptoms are expressions of disease in cell structure or cell arrangement seen under a microscope. Macroscopic symptoms are expressions of disease that can be seen with the unaided eye. Specific macroscopic symptoms are classified under one of four major categories: prenecrotic, necrotic, hypoplastic, and hyperplastic or hypertrophic. These categories reflect abnormal effects on host cells, tissues, and organs that can be seen without a hand lens or microscope.

Signs

Besides symptoms, the diagnostician recognizes signs characteristic of specific diseases. Signs are either structures formed by the pathogen or the result of interaction between pathogen and host—e.g., ooze of fire blight bacteria, slime flux from wetwood of elm, odour of tissues affected with bacterial soft rot.

Technological advances in the identification of pathogenic agents

Developments in microscopy, serology and immunology, molecular biology, and laboratory instrumentation have resulted in many new and sophisticated laboratory procedures for the identification of plant pathogens, particularly bacteria, viruses, and viroids. The techniques of traditional scanning microscopy and transmission electron microscopy have been applied to immunosorbent electron microscopy, in which the specimen is subject to an antigen-antibody reaction before observation and scanning tunneling microscopy, which provides information about the surface of a specimen by constructing a three-dimensional image.

Serological tests have been made more specific and convenient to perform since the discovery of a technique to produce large quantities of monoclonal antibodies, which bind to only one specific antigen. The sensitivity of antigen-antibody detection has been significantly increased by a radioimmunoassay (RIA) procedure. In this procedure a “known” antigen is overlayed on a plastic plate to which antigen molecules adhere. A solution of antibody is applied to the same plate; if the antibody is specific to the antigen, it will combine with it. This is followed by the application of radioactively labeled anti-antibody, which is allowed to react and then washed off. The radioactivity that remains on the plate is a measure of the amount of antibody that combined with the known fixed antigen. Another highly sensitive immunoassay is the enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). In principle this assay is similar to the RIA except that an enzyme system, instead of radioactivity, is used as an indicator of an antigen-antibody combination.

New analytic methods in molecular biology have made genetic studies for the characterization and identification of bacteria more practical. The DNA hybridization technique is an example. A strand of DNA from a known species (the probe) is radioactively labeled and “mixed” with DNA from an unidentified species. If the probe and the unknown DNA are from identical species, they will have complementary DNA sequences that enable them to bind to one another. Bound to DNA from the unknown species, the probe acts as a marker and identifies the bacteria.

The growing demand for quick identification of microorganisms has resulted in the development of instrumentation for automated technology that allows a large number of tests to be performed on many specimens in a short period of time. The results are read automatically and analyzed by a computer program to identify the pathogens.

Principles of disease control

Successful disease control requires thorough knowledge of the causal agent and the disease cycle, host-pathogen interactions in relation to environmental factors, and cost. Disease control starts with the best variety, seed, or planting stock available and continues throughout the life of the plant. For harvested crops, disease control extends through transport, storage, and marketing. Relatively few diseases are controlled by a single method; the majority require several approaches. These often need to be integrated into a broad program of biological, cultural, and chemical methods to control as many different pests—including insects, mites, rodents, and weeds—on a given crop as possible.

Most control measures are directed against inoculum of the pathogen and involve the principles of exclusion and avoidance, eradication, protection, host resistance and selection, and therapy.

Exclusion and avoidance

The principle of exclusion and avoidance is to keep the pathogen away from the growing host plant. This practice commonly excludes pathogens by disinfection of plants, seeds, or other parts, using chemicals or heat. Inspection and certification of seed and other planting stock help ensure freedom from disease. For gardeners this involves sorting bulbs or corms before planting and rejecting diseased plants. Federal and state plant quarantines, or embargoes, have been established to prevent introduction of potentially destructive pathogens into areas currently free of the disease. More than 150 countries now have established quarantine regulations.

Eradication

Eradication is concerned with elimination of the disease agent after it has become established in the area of the growing host or has penetrated the host. Such measures include crop rotation, destruction of the diseased plants, elimination of alternate host plants, pruning, disinfection, and heat treatments.

Crop rotation with nonsusceptible crops “starves out” bacteria, fungi, and nematodes with a restricted host range. Some pathogens can survive only as long as the host residue persists, usually no more than a year or two. Many pathogens, however, are relatively unaffected by rotation because they become established as saprotrophs in the soil (e.g., Fusarium and Pythium species; Rhizoctonia solani; and the potato scab actinomycete, Streptomyces scabies) or their propagative structures remain dormant but viable for many years (e.g., cysts of cyst nematodes, sporangia of the cabbage clubroot fungus, and onion smut spores).

Burning, deep plowing of plant debris, and fall spraying are used against such diseases as leaf blights of tomato, Dutch elm disease, and apple scab. Destruction of weed hosts also helps control such viral diseases as cucumber mosaic and curly top. For fungi whose complete life cycle requires two different host species, such as black stem rust of cereals and white-pine blister rust, destruction of alternate hosts is effective. Destruction of diseased plants helps control Dutch elm disease, oak wilt, and peach viral diseases—mosaic, phony peach, and rosette. Elimination of citrus canker in the southeastern United States has been one of the few successful eradication programs in history. Infected trees were sprayed with oil and burned.

Pruning and excision of a diseased portion of the plant have aided in reducing inoculum sources for canker and wood-rot diseases of shade trees and fire blight of pome fruits. Disinfection of contaminated tools, as well as packing and shipping containers, controls a wide range of diseases. Direct application of dry or wet heat is used to obtain seeds, bulbs, other propagative materials, and even entire plants free of viruses, nematodes, and other pathogens.

Protection

The principle of protection involves placing a barrier between the pathogen and the susceptible part of the host to shield the host from the pathogen. This can be accomplished by regulation of the environment, cultural and handling practices, control of insect carriers, and application of chemical pesticides.

Regulation of the environment

Selection of outdoor growing areas where weather is unfavourable for disease is a method of controlling disease by regulating the environment. Control of viral diseases of potato, for example, can be accomplished by growing the seed crop in northern regions where low temperatures are unfavourable for the aphid carriers. Another environmental factor that can be brought under control is the storage and in-transit environment. A variety of postharvest diseases of potato, sweet potato, onion, cabbage, apple, pear, and other crops are controlled in storage and shipment by keeping humidity and temperature low and by reducing the quantity of ethylene and other natural gases in storage houses.

Cultural practices

Selection of the best time and depth of seeding and planting is an effective cultural practice that reduces disease impact. Shallow planting of potatoes may help to prevent Rhizoctonia canker. Early fall seeding of winter wheat may be unfavourable for seedling infection by wheat bunt teliospores. Cool-temperature crops can be grown in soils infested with root knot nematode and harvested before soil temperatures become favourable for nematode activity. Adjustment of soil moisture is another cultural practice of widespread usefulness. For example, seed decay, damping-off (the destruction of seedlings at the soil line), and other seedling diseases are favoured by excessively wet soils. The presence of drain tiles in poorly drained fields and the use of ridges or beds for plants are often beneficial. Adjustment of soil pH also leads to control of some diseases. Common potato scab can be controlled by adjusting the pH to 5.2 or below; other acid-tolerant plants then must be used in crop rotation, however.

Regulation of fertility level and nutrient balance

Potash and nitrogen, and the balance between the two, may affect the incidence of certain bacterial, fungal, and viral diseases of corn, cotton, tobacco, and sugar beet. A number of microelements, including boron, iron, zinc, manganese, magnesium, copper, sulfur, and molybdenum, may cause noninfectious diseases of many crop and ornamental plants. Adjusting the soil pH, adding chelated (bound or enclosed in large organic molecules) or soluble salts to the soil, or spraying the foliage with these or similar salts is a corrective measure.

Handling practices

Late blight on potato tubers can be controlled by delaying harvest until the foliage has been killed by frost, chemicals, or mechanical beaters. Avoidance of bruises and cuts while digging, grading, and packing potatoes, sweet potatoes, and bulb crops also reduces disease incidence.

Control of insect vectors

There are many examples in which losses by bacteria, viruses, and mycoplasma-like disease agents can be reduced by controlling aphids, leafhoppers, thrips, beetles, and other carriers of these agents. Insect vectors can be controlled with organic or synthetic insecticides or by means of biological control.