Q&A for How to Identify and Treat Strawberry Diseases

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  • Question
    What pests attack strawberries?
    Maggie Moran
    Home & Garden Specialist
    Maggie Moran is a Professional Gardener in Pennsylvania.
    Home & Garden Specialist
    Expert Answer
    Besides birds, insects like slugs, snails, earwigs, and other aphids are known to attack strawberries.
  • Question
    Can you eat strawberries if they have mold on them?
    Maggie Moran
    Home & Garden Specialist
    Maggie Moran is a Professional Gardener in Pennsylvania.
    Home & Garden Specialist
    Expert Answer
    No, it is not safe to eat any of the soft fruits if they have mold on them.
  • Question
    Why are the leaves on my strawberry plants turning yellow?
    Maggie Moran
    Home & Garden Specialist
    Maggie Moran is a Professional Gardener in Pennsylvania.
    Home & Garden Specialist
    Expert Answer
    A typical cause of yellowing leaves is a lack of nitrogen in the soil. Try amending your soil or adding a fertilizer that contains nitrogen.
  • Question
    What is the name of the mold that grows on strawberries?
    Maggie Moran
    Home & Garden Specialist
    Maggie Moran is a Professional Gardener in Pennsylvania.
    Home & Garden Specialist
    Expert Answer
    The mold on strawberries is a fungus called Botrytis Cinerea. Avoid eating any strawberries that are moldy.
  • Question
    My strawberry plant has dark purple leaf spots and the fruit stops growing early -- it just withers and shrinks. What is wrong with the plant?
    Maggie Moran
    Home & Garden Specialist
    Maggie Moran is a Professional Gardener in Pennsylvania.
    Home & Garden Specialist
    Expert Answer
    Your strawberry plant probably has leaf blight or scorch. Improve air circulation around your plants by planting them an adequate distance apart. Also, be sure you are exposing them to enough sunlight and adequately watering them.
  • Question
    My strawberry plants have a white substance on the fruit and fruit stems. What is this?
    Community Answer
    Powdery mildew (Podosphaera aphanis) infects the tissue of strawberry plants and despite the fact that it’s mildew, which we usually associate with wet conditions, this strawberry leaf coating is fostered by dry conditions with moderate humidity and temps between 60-80 F. (15-26 C.).
  • Question
    My strawberry plant leaves are a brown color only around the edges, and eventually seems to be spreading inwards. This part then appears to be dying. What should I do?
    Community Answer
    Get some ladybugs. There are some little bugs that are eating the leaves and ladybugs eat them.
  • Question
    After uncovering my strawberries for the year, the leaves appear to be burnt. What could be causing this?
    Community Answer
    If they were covered all winter, then all the remaining leaves will be dead or dying. Remove them where the stems connect to the root mass. Every spring, new leaves will grow.
  • Question
    When almost ripe, my strawberries start to become pithy and seem to ferment before fully ripe. They are soft and squishy. What is causing this?
    Community Answer
    It is one of two pathogens, either rhizopus or mucor. If rhizopus, then temperatures below 40 F should halt the progression of the issue. If mucor, then you can only prevent it, not get rid of it. Remove all dead foliage and spent berry material as this will provide the inoculum for it to spread. Avoid overhead watering and exposing berries to the wet ground or standing moisture. High humidity is also to be avoided and increased airflow can reduce the rate of spread as well. Fungicides like Captan, Pristine, and Switch can be effective in prevention as well.
  • Question
    Why do the strawberries stop growing and form a hard spot at the tip of the strawberry?
    Community Answer
    It's packed with water and juices. Basically, it's swelling, and it can't grow anymore. Picture a balloon. The main part puffs up, but toward the end above the knot, it's stiff. It's the same concept.
  • Question
    Why are my strawberry plants turning yellow and how can I deal with it?
    Community Answer
    They're not ripe or there's a problem with the growing conditions. Is your soil fresh, black, and ground? Is the plant being overheated? Is there little or no accessibility to the sun? If so, try and fix these conditions. If it still isn't good, cut a slit in the middle of the stems. There might be an infection or fungi growing in the plant. Also this gives it air.
  • Question
    My strawberries have trails eaten into their skins, how can I stop this?
    Community Answer
    It sounds as though you have a pest problem. Bring a few strawberries into your local garden shop and ask an associate to help you identify and treat the pest.
  • Question
    The soil around my strawberries is attracting gnats. The leaves are also starting to decay and die. What should I do?
    Community Answer
    Try covering the soil in small fish-tank gravel (bright pink!). All the gnats will disappear. Water well and keep fertilizing according to your fertilizer's instructions.
  • Question
    What is causing the leaves on my strawberry plants to turn red and not send out runners?
    Community Answer
    Heavy watering can cause the strawberry plant to turn red but if worst comes to worst, just snip the red leaves off. And maybe try to let the strawberry plant dry out a bit; don't water it too much.
  • Question
    What do I do if I have little flies going over my strawberries?
    Community Answer
    They are probably aphids or fruit flies. If they are aphids, then add some ladybugs to your plants, as ladybugs eat aphids. If they are fruit flies, then making a simple trap should work: Add 1 cup of apple cider vinegar with a couple drops of dish soap into a jar and leave uncovered next to your strawberries. Using insecticide would work too but this harms beneficial insects and should therefore be avoided if at all possible.
  • Question
    What do I do if the strawberry plants look like there are spider webs under the leaves?
    Community Answer
    This is likely from two-spotted spider mites, a mite that is almost too small to be seen with the naked eye. With a magnifying glass you can easily see the spots. Inspect plants throughout the season and treat them before they multiply to the stage you have now, not when you find one or two, but when you find several on a plant. Treat with a miticide, or with predator mites. At the stage you have, with webbing on the underside of the leaves, it is likely that the plants will be severely stunted and the flavor, size, and quantity of the fruit will be inferior. Some miticides will kill only adults upon application; eggs will hatch and continue the cycle. Do a second spray 7 days later.
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