Bad news for basil

Planning on pesto?  Basil downy mildew can leave you with a pot of pasta and no sauce – and we have had reports of it in NY already this summer.

Basil downy mildew is a disease that can survive on the seed and infect the plant as soon as it germinates.  It can also travel by airborne spores and infect plants that started out clean.  It only affects basil – but that isn’t good news when you’re hungry for fresh basil on your mozzarella.

What can you do to prevent the disease?  Start with a variety that is resistant –red leafed, Thai, lemon, lime and spice types are less likely to get sick than the common sweet basil varieties.  Space your plants far enough apart to get good air flow between them and some sun reaching all the leaves.  Basil downy mildew is a water mold so it likes high humidity – and tight plants make for damp conditions. Water from below  – drip irrigation if you have it – to keep the leaves dry.

If the basil is already looking lush, scout your plants. Look for yellowish areas on the upper surface of the leaves.  When you turn the leaves over, you will see gray speckles and fuzzy growth – that’s the disease producing more spores to send out on the next air current.    Sometimes the yellowish areas on the leaves will turn brown and die.  If only a few plants are affected, remove them as soon as possible – bagging the sick plants to avoid spreading spores to the healthy ones.

Basil-DM-leaves-top-08_6275
Fig.1: Yellowing of the upper surface of affected basil leaves often occurs in sections of the leaf delineated by veins because the downy mildew pathogen cannot grow past major veins in leaves. Photo: Margaret Tuttle McGrath, Dept. of Plant Pathology and Plant-Microbe Biology, Cornell University.
basil with downy mildew
Fig.2: Purplish gray spores of the downy mildew pathogen only develop on the lower surface of leaves. These are the same leaves in Fig. 1. Sporulation coincides with yellowing on the opposite side of the leaf. Photo: Margaret Tuttle McGrath, Dept. of Plant Pathology and Plant-Microbe Biology, Cornell University.

One positive note?  Just like late blight in tomatoes, basil downy mildew does not survive in the soil so you can start clean again next year.

Want more information? See Meg McGrath’s website on basil downy mildew – updated for 2020.