KartavyaDesk
news

Coconut root wilt disease

Kartavya Desk Staff

Source: TH

Subject: Science and Technology

Context: Coconut Root Wilt Disease is in the news due to its rapid spread across major coconut-growing regions of Kerala, Tamil Nadu and Karnataka, affecting lakhs of palms.

About Coconut root wilt disease:

What it is?

• A debilitating, non-fatal disease of coconut caused by a phytoplasma (phloem-limited pathogen), leading to chronic decline and major yield loss.

• Infected palms often remain alive but become long-term inoculum sources, enabling continued spread through vectors.

Origin and spread:

• First reported over 150 years ago from Erattupetta (Kerala) and has remained a persistent endemic problem.

• Spread is vector-borne, and is accelerated by continuous coconut belts, wind-assisted vector movement, and rising abiotic stress (temperature extremes) plus biotic stress (new sucking pests like whiteflies) that increase palm susceptibility.

Vector:

• Transmitted through sap-sucking insect vectors; commonly cited vectors in endemic areas include Stephanitis typica and Proutista moesta.

Key symptoms:

Leaves look weak and droopy: The small leaf strips lose stiffness and hang down instead of standing firm — this is usually the first visible sign.

Leaves turn yellow from the tips: Yellowing starts at the ends of leaves and slowly spreads inward; in later stages, parts of the leaves dry up and die.

Leaves curl and cup inward: The leaf strips bend inward, making the whole leaf look ribbed or cup-shaped.

Poor flowering and nut fall: The tree produces fewer flowers, nuts fall prematurely, and overall yield drops sharply.

Tree slowly weakens: Roots start decaying, growth becomes poor, and in some cases the top of the trunk becomes thin and tapered.

Solutions and management:

Select and multiply tolerant palms: Palms that continue to yield well despite disease pressure should be identified in farmers’ fields, scientifically confirmed, and multiplied through local nurseries.

Good field and crop management: Remove badly affected, low-yielding palms to reduce disease spread. Improve soil health using green manure crops, ensure regular irrigation, proper drainage, and follow suitable intercropping to reduce stress on coconut palms.

Strengthen palms with organic nutrition: Apply farmyard manure or green manure along with neem cake every year. Healthy soil and strong roots help palms tolerate disease better even if infection occurs.

AI-assisted content, editorially reviewed by Kartavya Desk Staff.

About Kartavya Desk Staff

Articles in our archive published before our editorial team was expanded. Legacy content is periodically reviewed and updated by our current editors.

All News