MUSTARD / RAPESEED (Sarson)

India’s most important rabi oilseed, grown across 6 million hectares of Rajasthan, Haryana, and UP; the dominant edible oil source of north India and the backbone of the national oilseed mission.

5 Major Threats and Their Control

For educational purposes only. Recommended crop varieties are location-specific. Always verify chemical and variety recommendations with your local KVK or State Agriculture Department.

1. Alternaria Blight

(Alternaria brassicae)

The Threat:

  • Alternaria blight produces dark brown, concentric-ringed spots on leaves, stems, and siliques (seed pods) from the early vegetative stage through to harvest.
  • Severe silique infection allows the pathogen to grow into the pod wall and infect developing seeds directly, reducing yield and compromising seed quality.
  • The disease is most damaging during humid post-flowering conditions.
  • Early sowing without adequate plant spacing exacerbates the disease.
  • In epidemic years with wet February–March conditions, losses of 10–40% are documented.

The Solution:

  • Spray Iprodione 50 WP (Contact Fungicide — Dicarboximide, FRAC Group 2) @ 1 g/litre or Mancozeb 75 WP (Contact Fungicide — Dithiocarbamate, FRAC Group M3) @ 2.5 g/litre at first lesion appearance on primary leaves, and repeat at silique formation.
  • Use resistant varieties recommended by ICAR-DRMR, Bharatpur — Pusa Bold, Pusa Jaikisan, and RH-30 carry field-level Alternaria resistance.

2. Mustard Aphid

(Lipaphis erysimi)

The Threat:

  • The mustard aphid is one of the most visible and spectacular pest events in north Indian agriculture — grey-green colonies coat entire mustard plants in warm January conditions within 3–5 days.
  • Aphids extract phloem sap from every growing point simultaneously.
  • Pod set is reduced by 10–30% when heavy infestation coincides with the flowering stage.
  • Aphid populations are naturally regulated — a cold snap or predatory ladybirds can crash a massive population within 48 hours.
  • The greatest management error is spraying before natural enemy activity has had a chance to respond.

The Solution:

  • Scout from 30 days after sowing.
  • Do not spray until natural enemy activity is visibly absent and aphid counts genuinely exceed 150 per plant.
  • Apply Dimethoate 30 EC (Systemic Insecticide — Organophosphate, IRAC Group 1B) @ 1.5 ml/litre at threshold.
  • Conserve natural enemies — ladybirds, hoverflies, parasitic wasps — by avoiding calendar-based prophylactic spraying that destroys the population providing free biological control.

3. Sclerotinia Stem Rot

(Sclerotinia sclerotiorum)

The Threat:

  • Sclerotinia stem rot infects mustard stems through fallen petal debris at the flowering stage.
  • Infected petals lodged in the leaf axil or on the stem surface serve as the primary infection point.
  • White mycelial growth develops inside and outside the stem, producing large black sclerotia (hard resting structures) within the hollowed stem.
  • Infected stems collapse, and the hard sclerotia fall to the soil surface, persisting for years as inoculum for future seasons.
  • In wet, cool flowering seasons, losses of 5–20% occur.

The Solution:

  • Spray Carbendazim 50 WP (Systemic Fungicide — Benzimidazole, FRAC Group 1) @ 1 g/litre at 50% flowering — the critical infection window; spraying at this precise stage is significantly more effective than earlier or later applications.
  • Collect and destroy crop residue after harvest to remove sclerotia from the field.
  • Rotate away from susceptible hosts — sunflower, potato, and soybean — that maintain high sclerotia populations in the soil.

4. White Rust

(Albugo candida)

The Threat:

  • White rust produces chalky-white pustules on the underside of leaves.
  • Causes “staghead” malformation of inflorescences — elongated flower stems become distorted, swollen masses that fail to set seed.
  • Most severe during wet kharif-rabi transition weather (October–November) and in dense-sown crops with poor canopy ventilation.
  • Inflorescences affected by staghead produce no viable siliques, directly reducing seed yield.

The Solution:

  • Spray Metalaxyl 8% + Mancozeb 64% WP (Systemic + Contact Fungicide combination — FRAC Groups 4 and M3) @ 2.5 g/litre at first pustule appearance.
  • Use tolerant varieties recommended by ICAR-DRMR — Varuna and Kranti show field resistance to currently prevalent Albugo races.
  • Avoid dense sowing that creates the humid canopy microclimate in which the pathogen thrives.

5. Frost Damage at Flowering

The Threat:

  • Late-sown mustard — sown after October 15 — flowers during the coldest fortnight of January.
  • Minimum temperatures regularly fall below 2°C in Rajasthan, Haryana, and western UP.
  • A single severe frost night during full bloom can eliminate 15–20% of the season’s yield by killing open flowers.
  • The damage is entirely and predictably preventable through sowing date management — this is a calendar-predictable risk.

The Solution:

  • Sow during October 1–15 across the north Indian mustard belt to ensure flowering by late November, before the frost risk window.
  • For unavoidably late-sown crops, apply a light evening irrigation before a predicted frost night to moderate soil and canopy temperature during early morning hours of maximum cold.
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