Skip to content Skip to navigation
UMass Collegiate M The University of Massachusetts Amherst
  • Visit
  • Apply
  • Give
  • Search UMass.edu
Center for Agriculture, Food, and the Environment
UMass Extension Vegetable Program
  • Vegetable Home
  • About
    • About the Vegetable Program
    • Faculty & Staff
    • Funding
    • Request a visit
    • Request a Crop & Pest Management Planning Meeting
    • Contact us
  • Publications
    • Vegetable Notes
    • New England Vegetable Management Guide
    • Northeast Vegetable and Strawberry Pest Identification Guide
    • Cucurbit Disease Scouting & Management Guide
    • Sweet Corn IPM Scouting Guide & Record Keeping Book
    • Nutrient Management Guide for New England Vegetable Production
  • Fact Sheets
  • Special Topics
    • Brassica Pest Collaborative
    • Heating Greenhouses with Locally Grown Corn
    • Winter Production and Storage
  • Resources
    • Food Safety for Farmers
    • Nutrient Management
    • Scouting Resources
    • Research Reports
    • Recursos en Español (Spanish-Language Resources)
    • Useful Links
  • Services
    • Disease Diagnostics
    • Soil and Plant Nutrient Testing
    • UMass Extension Bookstore
    • Hot Water Seed Treatment
    • Mentor Farm Program
    • Scouting Program
  • News & Events
    • Upcoming Events
    • News
    • Past Events
  • Make a Gift

Cucurbits, Black Rot

Image
 Fruit infections exude gummy material and contain many black fruiting bodies.
Image
Black rot symptoms on butternut squash. Photo: UMass Vegetable Program
Image
Black rot pycnidia visible within a lesion. Photo: T. A. Zitter
Image
Black rot on pumpkin. Photo: R. L. Wick
Image
Black rot on acorn squash. Photo: R. L. Wick
Image
Gummy stem blight leaf lesion on cantaloupe. Photo: G. Holmes, Strawberry Center, Cal Poly San Luis Obispo, Bugwood.org

Didymella bryoniae

Black rot is the fruit rot phase of the gummy stem blight pathogen, Didymella bryoniae (Phoma cucurbitacaerum). It is characterized by a distinctive black decay of the fruits of all cucurbits. In temperate regions, the disease occurs mainly on winter squash, pumpkin, and greenhouse cucumber. The disease is most often noticed at harvest, but can be seen during crop and fruit growth when scouting inside the canopy.

Identification:

Symptoms vary on different cucurbits. On pumpkin and winter squash, symptoms on the leaves begin as a marginal necrosis followed by larger, wedged shaped necrotic areas, often with a yellow halo. Stem cankers develop in the cortical tissue and a brown, gummy exudate is produced. Small fruiting bodies (pycnidia or perithecia), may appear as black specks in diseased tissue. Stems may be girdled on seedlings and the plant dies, or on older plants stem cankers lead to wilt and decline. Small, water-soaked spots develop on fruit, enlarge, and exude gummy material and contain many black, fruiting bodies. Black rot on butternut may appear as a superficial hardened tan to white area which can develop concentric rings. This typically occurs where the fruit touched the soil. Lesions may become hardened and dormant on mature fruit that is cured and stored under proper conditions, but chilling injury or high humidity may activate the disease and cause fruit collapse during storage. Check fruit weekly for signs of black rot.

Life Cycle:

D. bryoniae is both seed and soil borne. The pathogen may be carried in or on seed. In the field, the fungus can survive in infected plant residue for more than one year. The disease is favored by relative humidity over 85% and leaf wetness periods greater than one hour. The optimum temperature for disease development is 75-77°F. Leaves are penetrated directly by the fungus, stems are infected through wounds or expansion of leaf lesions, and fruit are infected through flower scars or wounds. Wounding, striped cucumber beetle injury, aphid feeding, and powdery mildew all predispose plants to black rot infection. Control of powdery mildew by chemicals or by planting PM-resistant varieties can significantly reduce black rot in pumpkins and winter squash. On fruit held for fall sales or winter storage, a water-soaked lesion develops, usually associated with an injury to the rind, and soon black rot develops. Large Halloween pumpkins are more susceptible to black rot than smaller pie types. 

Cultural Controls & Prevention:

  • Use certified disease-free seed for all cucurbit plantings.
  • Rotate out of cucurbits for two years.
  • Crop debris should be plowed under promptly after harvest.
  • Control of black fruit rot starts with control of gummy stem blight.
  • Powdery mildew tolerant cultivars should be selected and powdery mildew should be controlled, as this disease predisposes the crop to black rot.
  • Control cucumber beetles and aphids.
  • Handle winter squash and pumpkin carefully during harvest to minimize wounding.
  • Cure pumpkin and squash at 85°F for two weeks before storage. An empty greenhouse may work well for this.
  • Avoid chilling injury to winter squash and pumpkins as this activates dormant black rot lesions and increases losses in storage. 
  • Satisfactory control can be obtained by regular application of protectant fungicides.

Chemical Controls & Pesticides:

For current information on disease recommendations ins specific crops including information on chemical control & pesticide management, please visit the New England Vegetable Management Guide website.

Crops that are affected by this disease:

  • Cucumber, Muskmelon, and Watermelon
  • Pumpkin, Squash, and Gourds

 

 

Last Updated: August 22, 2013

The Center for Agriculture, Food and the Environment and UMass Extension are equal opportunity providers and employers, United States Department of Agriculture cooperating. Contact your local Extension office for information on disability accommodations. Contact the State Center Director’s Office if you have concerns related to discrimination, 413-545-4800 or see ag.umass.edu/civil-rights-information.

Ways to Connect

  • Ask a question
  • Request a Visit
  • Request a Crop & Pest Management Planning Session
  • Submit a Sample
  • Become a Mentor Farm
  • Join the NEVBGA
  • Make a Donation

Connect with us on Social Media

extension vegetable program facebook page  extension vegetable program instagram   extension vegetable program youtube channel

Center for Agriculture, Food, and the Environment

 

Stockbridge Hall,
80 Campus Center Way
University of Massachusetts Amherst
Amherst, MA 01003-9246
Phone: (413) 545-4800
Fax: (413) 545-6555
ag [at] cns [dot] umass [dot] edu (ag[at]cns[dot]umass[dot]edu)

 

Civil Rights and Non-Discrimination Information

College of Natural Sciences

Login for faculty and staff

CAFE Units

Mass. Agricultural Experiment Station

UMass Extension

UMass Research and Education Center Farms

UMass Cranberry Station

Water Resources Research Center

Interest Areas

Agriculture

Commercial Horticulture

Energy

Environmental Conservation

Food Science

Nutrition

Water

Youth Development & 4-H

Services

Pesticide Education

Plant Diagnostics Laboratory

Soil and Plant Nutrient Testing Laboratory

Hot Water Seed Treatment

Water Testing / Environmental Analysis Laboratory

Projects

Conservation Assessment Prioritization System (CAPS)

Extension Risk Management/Crop Insurance Education

Mass. Envirothon

Mass. Herp Atlas

Mass. Keystone

MassWoods

North American Aquatic Connectivity Collaborative

RiverSmart

UMass Design Center in Springfield

Resources

Extension Sales Portal

Agriculture & Commercial Horticulture Resources

Community & Economic Vitality

Disaster Preparedness

Food Safety

Home Lawn & Garden

Integrated Pest Management (IPM)

Land Conservation Tools

Pollinators

Tick testing

Resources for Faculty and Staff

Extension Programs

4-H Youth Development

Agriculture

Crops, Dairy, Livestock and Equine

Fruit

Greenhouse Crops and Floriculture

Landscape, Nursery and Urban Forestry

Pesticide Education

Turf

Vegetable

Clean Energy

Climate Change

Food Science

Nutrition Education

Value-Added Food

Seal of The University of Massachusetts Amherst - 1863
©2025 University of Massachusetts Amherst · Site Policies · Accessibility