Seed-borne and post-harvest diseases of watermelon (Citrullus lanatus (Thunb.) Matsum. Nakai) and their management

Vol-3 | Issue-12 | December 2018 | Published Online: 10 December 2018    PDF ( 231 KB )
DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.2537913
Author(s)
Dr. Dilip Kumar Sharma 1

1Department of Science and Technology, Vardhaman Mahaveer Open Universiy, Kota, Rajasthan (India)

Abstract

Watermelon (Citrullus lanatus (Thunb.) Matsum. Nakai) family Cucurbitaceae is a popular dessert vegetable available round the year. It is an important multipurpose crop extensively grown in Rajasthan with widely accepted nutrients. It has very high water content (93ml/100g edible portion), carbohydrates (5 mg), calcium (8 mg), phosphorous (9 mg), ascorbic acid (8 mg), vitamins (0.64 g), lycopene and citrulline (per 100 g of edible portion). It is affected by various pre-harvest and post-harvest diseases that limit the marketability or restrict the economic returns to plant growers. In the field, vegetable is infected by various diseases but post-harvest diseases are also posing a great threat. The plant is attacked by various fungi, bacteria, viruses, mycoplasma and insects or diseases of non-parasitic origin.

Keywords
watermelon, Cucurbitaceae, Seed-borne diseases, Post-harvest diseases, control measures
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