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Should You Compost Blighted Tomato Plants?

tomato blight lesions
Late Blight lesions on tomatoes.

Tomato Blight is a devastating fungus that can wipe out your entire tomato garden in less than one month. There’s little you can do about blight once it infects your plants, as organic treatments for control of blight are only effective before the fungi appear. This is the same disease responsible for the Irish potato famine in the 19th century.

In 2009, tomato blight in the form of late blight destroyed a high percentage of farm and garden tomatoes in Pennsylvania and other spots in the eastern U.S. The question for gardeners after the blight was whether to compost or destroy the infected plants.

Is it safe to compost diseased tomato plants?

Beth K Gugino, Ph.D., Assistant Professor Of Plant Pathology at Penn State University, writing in “The Vegetable And Small Fruit Gazette” says, “In theory, if done correctly, plants with late blight can be disposed of by composting. However, often this is not achieved. Proper composting involves going through both the active and curing phase of composting. The duration of the process is dependent on the inputs (original materials), composting method used and compost pile management; it can take as little as 3 months or as long as a year. The composting of diseased plant material and weeds is generally not recommended because of the potential spread of weed seeds and disease-causing pathogens when the compost is applied and incorporated back into the garden. Plant tissue can survive in the center of a warm compost pile. As long as the plant tissue is alive, the pathogen can survive.

“…Next season it will be important to destroy all volunteer tomato plants. Make sure that all late blight infected tomato plant and fruit tissue from this season is dead/destroyed. Once dead, the pathogen can no longer survive since it is an obligate pathogen (requires living plant tissue to survive overwinter) and cannot survive outside a living host. The late blight pathogen cannot survive in infested dead plant debris.

“Next year, make sure to plant healthy disease-free transplants. Examine your plants regularly for symptoms of late blight, especially if cool, wet conditions prevail like this past year. In general, good disease management focuses on creating a less favorable environment for the pathogen. The pathogen survives and spreads more effectively when leaf surfaces are wet. Avoid wet leaves by watering at the base of the plant or by using overhead irrigation during mid-morning so the leaves dry quickly. Improve air circulation by spacing plants farther apart and eliminating weeds. These practices will also help with the management of other common tomato diseases.”

So there you have it from a scientist. If you’re an expert composter and know exactly what you’re doing, feel free to compost your tomato plants. If there’s any doubt about the temperature of your compost pile, destroy the plants to be on the safe side. The last thing you want is an infection (or re-infection) of blight in your tomato garden.

7 thoughts on “Should You Compost Blighted Tomato Plants?”

  1. “…Next season it will be important to destroy all volunteer tomato plants. Make sure that all late blight infected tomato plant and fruit tissue from this season is dead/destroyed. Once dead, the pathogen can no longer survive since it is an obligate pathogen (requires living plant tissue to survive overwinter) and cannot survive outside a living host. The late blight pathogen cannot survive in infested dead plant debris.

    This statement makes it seem like if my blighted tomato plants are left out on my garden all winter (living in Canada will kill anything in the winter!) , the blight pathogen should be dead and then able to be composted no?

    1. This is assuming you’re doing a proper, by the book “hot” compost pile, where the temperature reaches a significant point for a sufficient time to kill any pathogens. Then yes. Personally, I bag and destroy any diseased plants to be on the safe side.

  2. Thank you for the information. My tomatoes got the blight last summer but curiously my tomatillo plants did not. I’ve been growing tomatillos here in Chilly Ontario for the past 4 years with brilliant success. Actually, I only bought seeds once and have relied on volunteer plants every year since. I guess I’ll have to buy new seeds this year and get rid of all the volunteer seedlings that are sprouting all over my yard (in the lawn, between the tiles in the patio, under the hedge, EVERYWHERE. I’m really quite amazed at how well they do here!

  3. Thanks for this post. I have been trying to figure out how to prepare my garden to avoid this next year. This info gave me some hope that I am doing the right things.

    Got here from Blotanical.

  4. Its hard to say, if I would compost blighted toms. I live in the south and haven’t had issues with Blight. But from everything I have read, just to be on safe side I would not even, though I compost ALL garden waste including weeds and diseased plants. I do this because my compost pile almost is always stays hot enough to kill disease and seeds (160+ temps kills seeds and most diseases of the garden variety.)

    Love the site and I added you to my blog roll…

  5. Thanks for the professional advice…i have been pulling up blighted tomatoes recently too, and decided to trash them. arrgh, tomatoes! they are so sensitive.
    happy gardening,
    liz

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