16/10/2025
Now u Know!
Fusarium Wilt vs Bacterial Wilt — Know the Difference Before It’s Too Late
Both Fusarium wilt and Bacterial wilt make plants look weak and dry, but they are not the same disease. Many farmers confuse the two, which leads to using the wrong control methods.
What Causes Them
➡️Fusarium wilt is caused by a fungus called Fusarium oxysporum.
➡️Bacterial wilt is caused by a bacterium called Ralstonia solanacearum.
👉 The fungus produces spores that live in the soil for years.
👉 The bacteria love warm and wet soils they move easily through water and tools.
How They Enter the Plant
📌Both enter through the roots, especially when the roots are injured.
📌Fusarium spreads through contaminated soil and plant debris.
📌Bacterial wilt spreads through dirty tools, water, and soil movement from one place to another.
How to Identify Them in the Field
Fusarium Wilt:
📌Starts with yellowing of lower leaves.
📌Wilting happens slowly, sometimes only one side of the plant dries.
📌If you cut the stem, you’ll see brown lines inside, but no ooze comes out.
Bacterial Wilt:
📌The plant wilts suddenly looks healthy in the morning and collapsed by evening.
📌Leaves may remain green while the plant is dying.
📌Cut the stem and put it in clean water you’ll see milky white slime coming out. That’s the bacteria!
Common Crops Affected
➡️Fusarium wilt: tomato, banana, beans, watermelon, cotton
➡️Bacterial wilt: tomato, potato, eggplant, pepper, tobacco
How to Manage Them
To control Fusarium wilt:
✅ Use resistant or tolerant varieties.
✅ Rotate with non-host crops (like maize or cereals).
✅ Use Trichoderma bio-fungicide to clean up the soil.
✅ Remove and burn infected plants.
To control Bacterial wilt:
✅ Avoid waterlogging and improve drainage.
✅ Disinfect tools and avoid moving soil from infected areas.
✅ Rotate with crops that are not in the tomato or potato family.
✅ Apply beneficial microbes like Bacillus subtilis or Pseudomonas fluorescens.
Quick Field Test
➡️Cut the stem and dip it in clean water:
➡️If milky slime comes out➖ it’s Bacterial wilt.
➡️If no ooze but brown lines inside➖ it’s Fusarium wilt.
Final Take
Both diseases can destroy your field fast but knowing the difference helps you choose the right solution.
Remember: Good drainage, crop rotation, and field hygiene are your best protection.
Healthy soil = healthy plants