Liz Canham

Tomato Disease Identification - Some Useful Tips



Posted: Tuesday, July 28, 2009

by Liz Canham
http://www.internetmarketingwithliz.com

Tomato disease identification is quite difficult, if you want or need to know exactly which disease is affecting your tomato plants. However, as a large number of tomato diseases have similar indicators and many of them have no cure, recognising that there is a disease present is probably more important than knowing exactly what it is. This is because diseased plants and fallen leaves from those plants need to be gathered up and destroyed as soon as possible before they infect the rest of your tomato plants or indeed, other plants in your garden.If you're growing tomatoes and the leaves, stems and fruits look normal and blemish free and everything is growing at the rate and to the timescale that you expect, then your tomatoes are probably completely free of disease. However, if your tomato plants display any of the following symptoms, there is probably something wrong:
  1. Leaves develop spots on either side
  2. Leaves turn yellow
  3. Leaves wilt
  4. Leaves wither and die
  5. Spots on leaves increase in size
  6. Strangely shaped blemishes appear on leaves
  7. Black or brown patches appear on stems
  8. Cankers appear on stems
  9. Mould grows on stems
  10. Spots appear on stems
  11. Tomatoes have dark brown blemishes at flower end
  12. Tomatoes drop off plant before ripening
  13. Tomatoes have discoloured patches
  14. Sticky patches with small white flecks appear on leaves.
If you spot any of these signs, there's every chance that your tomato plants have some sort of disease so don't forget to destroy the offending plant immediately as well as any debris on the ground around it.

There are few tomato diseases which can be cured, so the best course of action is to make sure that they're not introduced into your garden in the first place. I found that the information at Tomato Disease Identification and in this book about growing tomatoes without chemicals was really helpful.
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