Tag Phytophthora Fruit Rot

Phytophthora fruit rot is the water-loving reaper—slipping into crops like arecanut through rain-soaked wounds and leaving water-logged lesions that collapse into mush. It thrives in saturated soils and persistent humidity, acting more like a swimming assassin than a traditional fungus. In TMN canon, it’s the tidebound invader, riding the currents of the monsoon’s underworld.

When the Rains Bring Rot: Karnataka’s Fungal Surge

The monsoon—India’s seasonal lifeline—has a spore-laced shadow. In Karnataka, early rains have triggered a surge in crop infections: rice blast, Phyllosticta leaf spots, Colletotrichum blights, and the dreaded Phytophthora fruit rot on arecanut. Warmth and humidity are giving fungi the perfect lab conditions to flourish—except this lab is an entire countryside. Farmers are scrambling with fungicides, drainage tricks, and time-tested cultural practices to keep fields from collapsing into a mushy ruin. This isn’t just weather—it’s a fungal siege.

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