How to distinguish the harmful symptoms of downy mildew and gray mold of roses?
Gray mold of rose also mainly harms the flowers, leaves and tender stems of rose. When the bud comes on, it leans to one side, and the lesion is gray-black and can spread to the whole bud. Finally, the diseased buds cannot open, turn brown and die. When the petals are infected, small waterlogging spots appear in the early stage, and the color of the spots varies with varieties. White varieties form reddish-brown spots, and pink and red varieties form light gray spots. When it occurs at the edge and tip of leaves, it is a flooded light brown spot at first, which sinks slightly, then turns brown and shrinks, and the tender diseased leaves droop. Later, the lesion gradually expanded, and a number of lesions were connected to form irregular serious spots, and the color gradually turned brown, rotted, wilted and withered. When the tender branches are infected, dark brown concave spots are formed in the middle of the stem nodes, and in severe cases, the upper branches wither and die. In warm and humid environment, the surface of diseased tissues is densely covered with botrytis cinerea, which is the conidiophore and conidia of pathogenic bacteria.