Blast is caused by the fungus Magnaporthe oryzae. It can affect all above ground parts of a rice plant: leaf, collar, node, neck, parts of panicle, and sometimes leaf sheath.
Node and neck blast commonly occur together and have similar symptoms.When a node or neck blast infection is present, it can cause plants to develop few or no grains at all.
Blast can occur wherever blast spores are present.
It occurs in areas with low soil moisture, frequent and prolonged periods of rain shower, and cool temperature in the daytime. In upland rice, large day-night temperature differences that cause dew formation on leaves and overall cooler temperatures favor the development of the disease.
Rice can have blast in all growth stages. However, leaf blast incidence tends to lessen as plants mature and develop adult plant resistance to the disease.
Check the nodes and necks for lesions and rotting.
Node infection occurs in banded pattern. Lesions on the node are blackish to grayish brown. Infected nodes can cause the culm, or the part of the plant that holds the panicle, to break.
Lesions on the neck are grayish brown and can cause girdling, making the neck and the panicle fall over. If infection of the neck occurs before milky stage, no grain is formed, but if infection occurs later, poor quality grains are formed.
Neck and node blast can also cause whiteheads or white panicles, similar to stem borer infection. Whiteheads caused by stem borers can be pulled apart from the plant, the stem will separate at the point where the insect bored into it. With neck and node blast, tugging on the stem will not result in removal.
The primary control option for blast is to plant resistant varieties.
Other crop management measures can also be done, such as:
View full fact sheet: Blast (Node and Neck) on IRRI Rice Knowledge Bank