Skip to main contentSkip to footer

Ringspot

Mycospharella brassicicola

Pathogen

Fungus

Hosts

Field brassicas

Symptoms

Rounded, dark brown sunken lesions up to 20 mm in diameter. Unlike Alternaria, (dark leaf spot), these lesions do not grow across major leaf veins.

The lesions have well defined edges with yellow margins around the edge. Within the lesions are dark concentric rings of black fruiting bodies. Under severe disease pressure the lesions can coalesce to the extent that whole leaves, or even entire plants, are totally devoid of any remaining healthy green leaf tissue.

Development

Requires periods of cool, damp conditions for the fungus to establish. Spores are wind spread and ringspot overwinters on crop debris or suitable weed hosts.

Infected seed can also be a source of infection.

Favourable Factors

Cool, wet weather

Importance

An important economic disease of brassicas which can infect many members of the brassica family, especially in intensive vegetable growing regions.

Ringspot can be directly responsible for significant economic loss by adversely affecting crop quality, particularly on the buttons of Brussels sprouts.

Control

  • Clean seed

  • Removal of host weeds and crop debris

  • Rotation

  • Fungicides programmes should be started at the first sign of infection

Early symptoms

Ringspot

Severe ringspot leaf infection

Ringspot on broccoli leaf

Ringspot on sprout buttons