Images
© A.M. Varela, icipe
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Early blight on tomato leaf. Leaf spots of early blight are circular, up to 1.2cm in diameter, brown, and often show a circular pattern, which distinguishes this disease from other leaf spots on tomato.
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© Allen Stevens and Jon Watterson, Seminis Vegetable Seeds, Inc.
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Early blight symptoms on tomato fruits. Typical fruit spots occur at the stem-end as a rot that radiates out from the area of attachment between the calyx and the fruit. The spot is usually brown to black, firm, depressed and has distinct concentric rings.
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© Biovision
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Early blight on tomato. Leaf spots of early blight are circular, up to 1.2 cm in diameter, brown, and often show a circular pattern, which distinguishes this disease from other leaf spots on tomato.
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© Chad Behrendt. Reproduced from University of Minnesota Extension.
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Early blight on potato tubers. Early blight results in surface lesions that appear a little darker than adjacent healthy skin. Lesions are usually slightly sunken, circular or irregular, and vary in size up to 1.9 cm in diameter. There is usually a well defined and sometimes slightly raised margin between healthy and diseased tissue. Internally, the tissue shows a brown to black corky, dry rot, usually not more than 6mm. Deep cracks may form in older lesions.
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© www.plantpath.wisc.edu
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Early blight on potato leaf. Affected leaves exhibit brown spots with concentric rings. Leaf spotting first appears on the oldest leaves and progresses upward on the plant. Entire plant could be defoliated and killed
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© M. Rutherford/CABI BioScience. Reproduced from the Crop Protection Compendium, 2004 Edition. CAB International, Wallingford.
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Early blight symptoms on okra leaf.
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© Clemson University - USDA Cooperative Extension Slide Series (www.bugwood.org)
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Early blight (Alternaria solani symptoms on tomato leaf.
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© A.A. Seif, icipe
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Early blight symptoms on tomato fruit
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