Amy-Lynn Albertson: Tomato time

Published 12:00 am Saturday, June 17, 2023

By Amy-Lynn Albertson
For the Salisbury Post

This Sunday is Father’s Day, and next week, we welcome the first official day of summer. Which means it is tomato time. As usual, I overestimated my family’s need for tomatoes and planted 10 plants in our raised beds. I always get so excited when I see plants at the farmers’ market. Now I have a jungle of plants and the beginning of a massive tomato harvest. I can’t rotate my crops because our backyard has two small 4-foot by 8-foot raised bed gardens. However, we do try to replace our soil every two years. Last year my tomatoes were knocked out by Tomato Spotted Wilt Virus or TSWV. Tomato spotted wilt virus is spread by tiny insects called thrips, which acquire the virus by feeding on one of many infected weeds or ornamental hosts and then spreading it to the developing tomato plants. Several weeks after transplanting the tomato plants into the garden, random plants may appear stunted, and younger leaves may be marked with bronze or dark spots or have prominent purple veins. Often the upper foliage will become twisted and cupped as the bronze areas expand. Fruits may have yellow spots. Younger plants may wilt and die, but older plants may survive and bear discolored fruit that may not fully ripen.

Prevention and treatment: Eliminating weeds in the garden is the first step in reducing the chance of acquiring TSWV. Keeping the grass and weeds mowed in areas surrounding the garden may reduce the spread of thrips onto susceptible plants. Weeds in the garden area during the winter may harbor both the thrips and the virus. For best prevention, remove the old crop debris, till and then mulch the garden for the winter to keep weeds and thrips down for the following year. Reflective (aluminum or silver-colored) mulch beneath the tomato plants may reduce the number of thrips that arrive and feed upon the plants. If reflective mulch is unavailable, paint black plastic mulch silver before transplanting the tomatoes.

There is no cure for a plant with TSWV. Roguing or removing infected plants immediately from the garden may help reduce the disease incidence on additional plants. However, feeding by thrips can transmit the virus to plants within minutes. Because of this rapid infection time, insecticidal sprays may be useless for the home gardener.

Seeds of several TSWV-resistant cultivars of tomatoes are available from mail-order seed companies. These cultivars are resistant but not totally immune. They may acquire the virus, but yields and fruit quality may remain acceptable. Look for cultivars with resistance if this has been a problem in the past.

This summer, our Cooperative Extension team is helping N.C. State research tomatoes at several farms to find out more about TSWV. The NCSU breeding program has released several varieties of TSWV-resistant tomatoes. However, some of those varieties have started to break resistance.

So research is being done to determine why and how to manage it. Different types of plastic are one type of control measure. Another is looking at the weed populations around the tomato fields and if they are overwintering thrips populations. Researchers are on the farms weekly, taking data and learning more about this disease.  To learn more about Tomato Spotted Wilt Virus or other tomato problems contact the Rowan County Extension Center at 704-216-8970 or go to http://rowan.ces.ncsu.edu.

Amy-Lynn Albertson is director of the Rowan County Extension.

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