
Beets (Beta)
Plant Health Problems
Diseases caused by Fungi:
Leaf spot, Cercospora beticola.
Small, circular, tan spots appear scattered over the leaves. The spots have a
purple border. This fungus disease is also found on chard and mangels.
Since the disease can be carried in the seed, the use of fungicide-treated seed
may be beneficial.
Diseases caused by Bacteria:
Scab, Streptomyces scabies.
Scab is caused by a soilborne bacterium that infects the roots causing corky
spots. Yield is rarely reduced but damaged roots may become unmarketable. Scab
usually appears in heavily-limed soils. See Potato and Common Scab for a more
detailed discussion of this disease.
Insect Problems
Aphids.
The bean aphid and the green peach aphid feed on beets. See
Aphid fact sheet.
Blister beetles. Family Meloidae.
Several species of large, active, slender, soft-bodied beetles may occasionally
feed on the greens. They are usually dark colored and may have thin white lines
on their wingcovers. The larvae live in the soil where they feed entirely upon
grasshopper eggs. Control is not usually necessary.
Flea beetles.
Several species of flea beetles including the potato flea beetle, Epitrix
cucumeris, the palestriped flea beetle, Systena blanda, the
redheaded flea beetle, Systena frontalis, and the smartweed flea beetle,
Systena hudsonias, may feed on beets. Young plants may be damaged though
older plants show no injury to the feeding. Control measures are rarely
necessary. See Flea beetle fact sheet.
Garden springtail, Bourletiella hortensis.
Tiny yellow-spotted purple insects eat holes in the leaves of seedlings. These
insects have no wings but are equipped with forked, tail-like appendages by
means of which they project themselves into the air. They are usually found
only on small plants near the surface of the soil. Control is not usually
necessary.
Spinach leaf miner, Pegomya hyoscyami.
This leaf miner feeds on beets and spinach, but unless the beets are being
grown for their greens, control is not usually necessary. It also infests chard
and several common weeds, including nightshade, chickweed, plantain, and
especially lambsquarters. There are three or four generations each season and
the insect winters in the soil in the pupal stage. The adult is a gray fly
about 1/4" long. It emerges in April or May and lays white cylindrical,
netted eggs in clusters of from two to five on the underside of a leaf. They
hatch in 4 to 6 days and the young maggots enter the tissue of the leaf where
they make first thread-like mines, and then blotch mines, which may eventually
involve the entire leaf. If food becomes exhausted, they migrate to other
leaves. The larva, about 1/3" long, matures in a period that varies from 7
to 16 days. It then descends 2 or 3" into the soil and pupates, the flies
emerging 14 to 25 days later.
Row covers can be used to keep the flies away from the plants, but the area planted must have been free of both cultivated and weed hosts in the previous year. Deep spring plowing can destroy overwintering leafminer pupae. The gardener can find and crush the eggs on the leaf and remove leaves with mines and destroy them. Malathion is among the compounds registered for control of this pest in Connecticut. Chemical control must be directed to control adults, since once the larvae are inside the leaf, this insecticide will not reach them. Consult the label for dosage rates, safety precautions, and observe the long required interval from application to when the spinach may be harvested.
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