PEARL MILLET (Bajra)

Cultivated across 7 million hectares of Rajasthan, Gujarat, and Haryana as the primary food and fodder crop of the arid and semi-arid northwest India.

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. Downy Mildew / "Greengear"

(Sclerospora graminicola)

The Threat:

  • Downy mildew is the most historically devastating disease of pearl millet in India.
  • It infects seedlings systemically through roots, turning young plants into white sporulating masses within 2–3 weeks.
  • Spreads rapidly through airborne spores in humid conditions, damaging entire fields quickly.
  • Continuous cultivation of susceptible hybrids increases soil inoculum and disease severity.
  • Causes 10–40% yield loss, higher in epidemic years.

The Solution:

  • Treat seed with Metalaxyl 35 WS @ 3 g/kg.
  • Use resistant hybrids — HHB-67, Pusa-605, and RHB-177.
  • Avoid using seed from infected fields.
  • Rotate crops and avoid continuous bajra cultivation on the same land.

2. Ergot Disease

(Claviceps fusiformis)

The Threat:

  • Ergot replaces grains with curved, honeydew-coated sclerotia containing toxic alkaloids (ergotamine and related compounds).
  • These toxins cause ergotism — leading to convulsions and gangrene in severe cases.
  • In livestock, contaminated fodder causes reduced milk yield, reproductive failure, and even death.
  • Favoured by cool, cloudy weather during flowering, especially in late-sown crops.

The Solution:

  • Sow on time to ensure flowering avoids cool, humid conditions.
  • Spray Carbendazim 50 WP @ 0.5 g/litre at early heading as a preventive measure.
  • Remove and destroy infected plants before sclerotia mature.
  • Do not feed contaminated grain or fodder to livestock.
  • Use certified, ergot-free seed.

3. Shoot Fly

(Atherigona approximata)

The Threat:

  • Bajra shoot fly damages are similar to sorghum shoot fly but specific to pearl millet.
  • Larva bores into the central growing point, causing “deadheart” (death of central shoot).
  • Most severe in late-sown crops during peak fly population (July–August).
  • Also attacks tiller buds, reducing the plant’s ability to compensate through tillering.

The Solution:

  • Sow early to escape peak infestation.
  • Treat seed with Imidacloprid 70 WS @ 7 g/kg before sowing.
  • Use early-maturing varieties to reduce exposure period.
  • Monitor fields from 7–21 days after emergence for deadheart incidence.

4. Drought (Mid-Season and Terminal)

(Mid-Season and Terminal)

The Threat:

  • Rajasthan’s monsoon is highly erratic, with long dry spells after initial rainfall.
  • Moisture stress at boot stage reduces panicle exsertion.
  • Drought at heading leads to floret sterility and poor grain set.
  • This is a recurring issue in many districts, especially when rains fail in August.

The Solution:

  • Practice conservation tillage with crop residue retention.
  • Sow on ridges to improve water availability to roots.
  • Grow short-duration varieties — MPMH-17 and Pusa-605.
  • Maintain field bunds to reduce runoff and conserve moisture.

5. Iron / Zinc Deficiency

The Threat:

  • Calcareous, high-pH soils in Rajasthan, Gujarat, and Haryana reduce availability of iron and zinc.
  • Iron deficiency causes interveinal chlorosis — young leaves turn yellow with green veins.
  • Zinc deficiency affects enzyme activity, protein synthesis, and grain filling.
  • Reduces both crop yield and grain nutritional quality.
  • A major concern in regions where bajra is a staple food.

The Solution:

  • Spray ferrous sulphate (FeSO₄) @ 0.5% at 3-week intervals after symptom appearance.
  • Apply Zinc Sulphate (ZnSO₄) 21% @ 25 kg/ha as basal dose where deficiency is confirmed.
  • Grow biofortified varieties — Dhanashakti and HHB-299.
Scroll to Top