Curryleaf Pests and Diseases Leaf spot Tortoise beetle Citrus butterfly Citrus psylla/psyllid Scales Mealybugs Aphids Tw...
Curryleaf Pests and
Diseases
- Leaf spot
- Tortoise beetle
- Citrus butterfly
- Citrus psylla/psyllid
- Scales
- Mealybugs
- Aphids
- Two spotted spider mite
- IPM for Curry Leaf
Leaf spot

Phyllosticta
leaf spot symptoms range from a few round spots or lesions. It may cause early
loss of leaves in case of severe infestation and can debilitate the tree. The
irregular, round, yellowish brown lesions are produced on leaves. Under the
favourable conditions, tiny black fruiting bodies of the pathogen are produced,
usually they form a circle. The center of these spots is dead tissue that
easily breaks away leaving a hole.
Primary
infection: Through soil and rain splash
Secondary
infection : through air and rain splash during wed condition
Tortoise beetle
Biology
- Grub: Black with a forked posterior and a flattened
body.
- Adults: Reddish-brown beetles.
Life
cycle:

Damage
Symptoms:
Cause
heavy defoliation of commercial crops. Both the adult beetle and the grub feed
on the leaves, boring holes into them.
Citrus butterfly
Biology:
- Eggs: Yellowish white, round, smooth eggs are laid
singly on tender leaves and shoots by P. demoleus. Egg hatches in about 3 – 8
days.
- Larva: Freshly hatched caterpillars are dark brown and
soon develop irregular white markings on their body resembling bird’s
drop. The caterpillars feed voraciously on tender leaves right up to the
mid ribs and defoliate the entire seedlings or the tree leaving behind the
only midribs.
- Adults: Papilio
demoleus is a big beautiful butterfly with yellow and
black markings on all the four wings, having wing expanse of about 50-60
mm. Its hind wings have a brick red oval patch near the anal margin and
there is no tail like extension behind though common in Papilionidae.
Papilio polytes males are black and females vary in form. Papilio helenus
has black wings with three white distal spots.
Life
cycle:

Natural
enemies : Parasitoids


Citrus psylla/psyllid
Biology:
- Nymphs: Its nymphs are yellow, orange or brown with
flattened bodies. They are hard to see, since they're only 1/100 to 1/14
inch long. The nymphs also secrete a sticky substance called honeydew that
attracts sooty mold.
- Adults: Citrus psyllid is a tiny, mottled-brown, winged
insect that damages curry leaf plants when it sucks sap out of young
leaves. This psyllid grows to be between 1/16 and 1/8 inch long with red
eyes and short antennae.
Life
cycle:

Damage
symptoms:
Citrus
psyllids are mottled brown insects that feed directly on the leaf
of the curry leaf tree. This causes damage to the leaves and stems, and
can also introduce bacteria to the tree. Symptoms include twisted and curling
leaves, and dieback of shoots.
Natural
enemies - Predators:

Scales
Scales
are tiny insects that appear as small, flat bumps on the surface of a leaf.
Life
cycle:

Nature
and symptoms of damage:
Scales
damage plants by sucking out plant sap as a result leaves to yellow and wilt.
While a few scales will not damage a curry tree, this insect reproduces rapidly
and a small population can quickly become an infestation. Close monitoring of
your curry tree can also help to catch scale problems before they become
infestations.
Natural enemies
Parasitoids:

Predators:

Mealybugs
Biology:
Citrus
mealy bugs are soft pinkish-white insects with a waxy appearance. Mealy bugs
are softbodied, wingless insects that grow between 1/20 and 1/5 inch long.
Mealy bugs lay large clusters of several hundred eggs on the surface of a leaf,
which then hatch into yellow nymphs, which feed on plant sap.
Life
cycle:

Damage
symptoms:
In
addition to causing leaves to shrivel, large infestations of citrus mealybugs
can cause a tree’s fruit to drop prematurely. Mealybugs usually gather in large
numbers, causing premature leaf drop and twig dieback when they feed. Like
psyllids, they secrete honeydew, which attracts black sooty mold.
Natural enemies
Parasitoids:

Predators:

Aphids
Biology:
Aphids
are small pear-shaped insects that may appear in a range of colors, including
yellow, green, brown or white.
Life
cycle:

Damage
symptoms:
Aphids
suck the juices from a plant, causing the leaves to mottle and curl, and can
also introduce mold fungus. Aphids tend to feed in dense clusters and are slow
to react when disturbed.
Natural
enemies
Parasitoids:

Predators:

Two spotted spider mite
Two-spotted
mites reproduce sexually, and the females lay eggs on buds, leaves, twigs,
stems and trunks. The eggs, which are laid in vast numbers, hatch to produce
nymphs which grow through a succession of moults. The first stage nymphs are
six-legged; the subsequent stage produces nymphs with a full complement of
eight legs. Two-spotted mites overwinter in the soil. Generation time will vary
according to temperature, but in warm conditions this time can be as short as
four days.
Life
cycle:

Damage
symptoms:
Two
spotted spider mite and carmine spider mite damage to strawberries appears as
stippling, scarring, and bronzing of the leaves and calyx. damaging during the
first 2 to 5 months following transplanting in late summer or fall, and yield
loss is detectable at all mite infestation levels exceeding one mite per
leaflet
Natural
enemies
Predator
mites:

IPM for Curry Leaf
To know
the IPM practices for Curry Leaf, click here.
Source: NIPHM ; Directorate of Plant
Protection, Quarantine & Storage
24 ratings
Curry Leaf Pests
Pests of National Significance in Curryleaf
Insect pests
- Citrus butterfly: Papilio demoleus, (Esper, 1798) P. polytes
polytes, (Linnaeus, 1758) (Lepidoptera: Papilionidae)
- Citrus psylla or psyllid: Diaphorina citri Kuwayama (Hemiptera:
Psyllidae)
- Scales: Unaspis citri (Comstock) (Hemiptera:
Coccoidea: Diaspididae)
- Mealy bugs: Planococcus citri (Risso) (Hemiptera:
Pseudococcidae)
- Aphids: Toxoptera aurantii (Boyer de
Fonscolombe) (Hemiptera: Aphididae)
- Tortoise beetle: Silana farinose (Boheman)
(Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae: Cassidinae)
- Two spotted mites:Tetranychus spp.
Koch (Acarina: Tetranychidae)
- Citrus leaf miner: Phyllocnistis citrella Stainton
(Lepidoptera: Gracillariidae: Phyllocnistinae)
Diseases
- Leaf spot (Phyllosticta leaf
spot)
Major weeds
Broadleaf
weeds
- Pigweed: Amaranthus viridis Hook. F.
- Swine cress: Coronopus didymus (L.) Sm.
- Black nightshade: Solanum nigrum L.
- Common purselane: Portulaca oleracea L.
- False amaranth: Digera arvensis Forssk.
- Lamb’s quarter: Chenopodium album L.
- Scarlet Pimpernel: Anagallis arvensis L.
- Sweet clover: Melilotus indica (L.) All.
- Fine leaf fumitory: Fumaria parviflora Lam.
- Corn spurry: Spergula arvensis L.
Grassy
weeds
- Rabbit/Crow foot grass: Dactyloctenium aegyptium (L.) Beauv.
- Crabgrass: Digiteria sanguinalis (L.) Willd.
- Barnyard grass: Echinochloa crusgalli (L.) Scop.
- Blue grass: Poa annua L.
- Canary grass: Phalaris minor Retz.
Sedges
- Purple nutsedge: Cyperus rotundus L.
- Flat sedge: Cyperus iria L.
IPM for Curry Lear
To know
the IPM practices for Curry Leaf, click here.
Source: NIPHM, Directorate
of Plant
Protection, Quarantine & Storage
29 ratings
Crop stage-wise IPM
for Curry Leaf
|
Management |
Activity |
Pre-sowing
|
|
|
Nutrients |
|
|
Weeds |
|
|
Resting stages of pests, soil-borne fungus |
|
|
* Applying Trichoderma as seed and nursery treatment and
Pseudomonas fluorescens as seed, nursery treatment and soil application (if
commercial products are used, check for label claim. However, biopesticides
produced by farmers for own consumption in their fields, registration is not
required). |
|
Vegetative stage
|
|
|
Nutrients |
|
|
Weeds & Inter cultivation |
|
|
Leaf spot |
Cultural control:
Biological control:
|
|
Tortoise beetle |
Mechanical control:
Biological control:
|
|
Leaf eating caterpillar (Citrus butterfly) |
Cultural control:
Biological control:
|
|
Citrus psylla or psyllid |
Cultural control:
Biological control:
|
|
Scale insects |
Biological control:
|
|
Mealybug |
Biological control:
|
|
Citrus leafminer |
Biological control:
|
|
Aphid |
Biological control:
|
Reproductive stage (in subsequent seasons)
|
|
|
Nutrient management |
Apply 4 kg of FYM, 5: 10:10 g N: P: K/plant and mix with soil
after every harvest. |
|
Weed management |
Need based hoeing and weeding should be done around the plant
to keep it weed free. |
|
Citrus psylla or psyllid |
Same as in vegetative stage |
|
Mealybug, Aphid |
Same as in vegetative stage |
|
Scale |
Same as in vegetative stage |
|
Citrus leaf miner |
Same as in vegetative stage |
Source: NIPHM, Directorate
of Plant Protection, Quarantine & Storage
28 ratings
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