Potato (Solanum tuberosum)
Wart (Synchytrium endobioticum)
Symptoms
- The disease exhibits cauliflower-like warty growths on tubers, stolons, and stem bases, excluding roots.
- In wet conditions, it can present as a greenish-yellow crust on stems and leaves near or at ground level.
- These warts are typically soft, pulpy, and spherical, matching the color of the tubers.
- Exposure to sunlight may cause a color change in the warts, turning them green.
- Entire tuber surfaces may occasionally be covered with these warts.
- Over time, the tumors may darken, transitioning from their initial color to brown or black.
- Secondary microorganisms can sometimes invade the wart tissues, leading to their decomposition.
Management
- The primary mode of disease spread is through the use of wart-affected tubers as seed.
- Additionally, the disease can spread via seeds of wart immune varieties grown in wart-infested soil, contaminated soil transported by humans, animals, or farm equipment, and manure containing diseased material.
- Effective measures to control the spread include using disease-free potatoes as seed material and disposing of wart-affected lumps and potato peelings by burning.
- Implementing crop rotation with non-host crops for a period of 8-10 years can help manage the disease.
- Certain potato lines such as Rondo, Edina, and Mira from European countries have shown notable resistance to wart.
- Varieties developed by CPRI, Shimla, such as Kufri Jyoti, Kufri Sherpa, Kufri Jeevan, and Kufri Muthu, have demonstrated resistance to both late blight and wart.

