Onion white rot

White rot is a serious fungal disease of onions, garlic and leeks causing yellowed, wilting foliage and decay of the roots and bulb. It may persist in the soil for many years.

Onion white rot
Onion white rot

Quick facts

Common name Onion white rot
Scientific name Stromatinia cepivora (syn. Sclerotium cepivorum)
Plants affected Onions, garlic, leeks and other alliums
Main symptoms Yellow and wilting foliage, decay of roots and the base of the bulb
Caused by Fungus
Timing Mid-summer until early autumn

What is onion white rot?

White rot is a serious disease of plants of the allium family, especially bulb onions, garlic and leeks, caused by the soil-borne fungus Stromatinia cepivora (syn. Sclerotium cepivorum), which can persist in the soil for many years. Look for symptoms from mid-summer until early autumn.

Symptoms

You may see the following symptoms:

  • Above ground, the first symptom is yellowing and wilting of the foliage, especially in dry weather
  • Under wetter conditions the plants may not wilt, but will become loose in the soil
  • Below ground, the pathogen rots the roots and then invades the bulb
  • White, fluffy fungal growth appears on the base of the bulb, and later this growth becomes covered in small, round, black, seed-like structures called sclerotia

Control

Non-chemical control

Stromatinia cepivora is effectively impossible to eliminate once it has been introduced and the long survival period makes crop rotation impractical. It is therefore extremely important to avoid introduction to previously clean sites. It is transported in contaminated soil, for example on tools or on muddy footwear. Take particular care in areas where cross contamination can occur easily, for example on allotments.

Chemical control

There are no chemical treatments against this disease or for soil sterilisation available to UK gardeners.

As mentioned below, the sclerotia are stimulated to germinate by volatile compounds emitted by onions. Therefore the possibility exists of using the compounds as a chemical soil treatment to trick the sclerotia to germinate and then die because of a lack of suitable plants to infect. This has been under discussion for many years, but has not yet translated into the availability of any products on the UK amateur market.

Biology

Stromatinia cepivora is an unusual fungus in that it does not produce any spores of importance to the normal life cycle. It exists in the soil as round black resting structures (sclerotia) about 0.5mm (1/32in) diameter, which remain dormant so long as no members of the onion family are grown. Sclerotia can detect certain volatile chemicals unique to alliums and when these are sensed the sclerotia germinate, producing fungal growth which invades the roots directly. Fresh sclerotia are then formed on the rotting bulbs and recontaminate the soil.

Sclerotia can remain in the soil for at least 15 years, though they will not always live this long. They can only germinate once and the fungus will then die out if it can not infect. Both sclerotial germination and fungal growth are inhibited above 20ºC (68ºF), so in the UK the problem is more severe in cool, wet summers; in warmer climates the disease is only a problem over the winter months.

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