Rhizoctonia solani sensu lato causes a wide range of commercially significant plant diseases. It is one of the fungi responsible for
brown patch (a
turfgrass disease),
damping off (e.g. in
soybean seedlings), black scurf of potatoes, bare patch of
cereals,
root rot of
sugar beet, belly rot of
cucumber, banded leaf and sheath blight in
maize,
sheath blight of
rice, and many other pathogenic conditions. The fungus, therefore, has a wide host range and strains of
R. solani may differ in the hosts they are able to infect, the virulence of infection, selectivity for a given host (which may range from nonpathogenic to highly virulent), the temperature at which infection occurs, the ability to develop in lower soil levels, the ability to form
sclerotia, the growth rate, and survival in a certain area. These factors may not always be distinctive in every host that
Rhizoctonia attacks or in every strain thereof.
R. solani primarily attacks seeds of plants below the soil surface, but can also infect pods, roots, leaves, and stems. The most common symptom of
Rhizoctonia is "damping off", or the failure of infected seeds to germinate.
R. solani may invade the seed before it has germinated to cause this pre-emergent damping off, or it can kill very young seedlings soon after they emerge from the soil. Seeds that do germinate before being killed by the fungus have reddish-brown lesions and cankers on stems and roots. Various environmental conditions put plants at higher risk of infection. The pathogen prefers warmer, wet climates for infection and growth. Seedlings are most susceptible to disease in their early stages. Cereals in regions of
England,
South Australia,
Canada, and
India experience losses caused by
R. solani every year. Roots are killed back, causing plants to be stunted and spindly. Other non-cereal plants in those regions can experience brown stumps as another symptom of the pathogen.
R. solani can also cause
hypocotyl and
stem cankers on mature plants of
tomatoes,
potatoes, and
cabbages. Strands of mycelium and sometimes sclerotia appear on their surfaces. Roots turn brown and die after a period of time. The best known symptom of
R. solani is black scurf on potato tubers, the scurf being the sclerotia of the fungus. == Disease cycle ==