Home
Diseases
 Ascochyta Leaf Scorch (Spot)
 Black Point
 Black (Stem) Rust
 Brown (Leaf) Rust
 Bunt or Stinking Smut
 Barley Yellow Dwarf Virus (BYDV)
 Cephalosporium Leaf Stripe
 Covered Smut
 Crown Rust
 Dwarf Bunt
 Ergot
 Eyespot
 Flag Smut
 Foot Rot
 Fusarium (Foot Rot, Seedling Blight, Ear (Head) Blight)
 Halo Spot
 Leaf and Glume Blotch
 Leaf Spot
 Leaf Stripe
 Loose Smut
 Mosaics
 Net Blotch
 Omphalina Patch
 Powdery Mildew
 Ramularia Leaf Spot
 Rhizoctonia Stunt
 Rhynchosporium (Leaf Scald)
 Septoria Leaf Blotch
 Sharp Eyespot
 Snow Mould (Pink Snow Mould)
 Snow Rot (Grey or Speckled Snow Mould)
 Sooty Moulds
 Stripe Smut
 Take-all
 Tan Spot (DTR)
 Yellow (Stripe) Rust
Photo Gallery
Glossary
Reference Material
Site Map

Pathogen 

  • Didymella exitialis (Ascochyta spp.)

Hosts

The disease infects wheat, barley, oats, rye, triticale and many grass species.

Symptoms

Symptoms are found on lower leaves early in the season and upper leaves later on. Lesions are usually elliptical and although chlorotic at first, soon become buff to brown in colour, often splitting longitudinally. Initially lesions have a dark brown margin with papery white centre. The fungus often invades damaged leaf tissue such as that caused by liquid urea or nitrogen. Symptoms become less distinct with time and become very similar to those caused by S. nodorum.  Pycnidia within the lesions are generally black, distinguishing the disease from S. nodorum which tends to have light coloured pycnidia.

Life cycle

Pycnidia and mycelium within leaf tissue is thought to survive on crop debris, much like the Septoria pathogens.

Importance

The disease is of relatively minor importance although in individual crops the disease is likely to add to leaf death in the same way as the septoria diseases. Symptoms are often seen later in the season towards the end of grain filling when they are unlikely to cause any yield loss. The teleomorph stage of the fungus (Didymella exitialis) is common in Europe and the air-borne ascospores of the fungus are commonly found in late summer in the UK, where they have been implicated in late summer asthma.

www.hgca.com