Green fruit rot
Disease
Green fruit rot
Botrytis cinerea Pers.:Fr. Sclerotinia sclerotiorum (Lib.) de Bary
Distribution: Common to all fruit-growing regions in eastern North America; most common in wet seasons.
Photos
Sclerotinia-infected fruit develop a dense, white, fungal growth.
Themis Michailides, Univ. of California
C
Both fungi attack the blossoms but rarely invade the twig (A). Blighting of the blossoms followed by gray spore masses is typical of infection from B. cinerea. S. sclerotiorum infects senescing floral parts; the white mycelium of the fungus is sometimes observed on blighted blossoms. Fruit infection occurs when developing fruit are in direct contact with blighted blossoms. Botrytis-infected fruit develop a typical gray sporulation (B). Sclerotinia-infected fruit develop a dense white fungal growth that often leaves the fruit deformed (C).