Management of Rhizoctonia Root and Crown Rot of Sugarbeet
(PP1495, Revised Nov. 2021)Rhizoctonia root and crown rot is one of the most severe soil-borne diseases of sugarbeet and it’s a major problem for growers in Minnesota and North Dakota.
The local sugarbeet-growing areas have been in a wet cycle during the past 20 years. Fields with high disease severity probably have resulted from a combination of wet conditions and a prevalence of other susceptible host crops in the rotation. For example, nonsusceptible crops such as wheat and barley formerly used in rotation with sugarbeet have decreased in acreage and have been replaced with susceptible crops such as soybeans, edible beans and corn.
Rhizoctonia root and crown rot may reduce yield significantly and diseased roots may cause problems in storage piles. Growers at some sugar cooperatives are required to destroy fields with more than a 50 percent incidence of root rot because infected roots cannot be placed in piles for-long term storage.