Preventing Crop Diseases in Mediterranean Greenhouses: Cultural Practices That Work

Introduction

Most crop disease management in Mediterranean greenhouses is reactive — farmers notice

symptoms and reach for a fungicide. By the time symptoms are visible, the pathogen has

already established, spread, and caused yield loss that no treatment can fully reverse. The

alternative — proactive cultural management that prevents infection before it starts — is both

more effective and dramatically less expensive.

This article focuses on the management practices, costing little to nothing, that reduce disease

pressure by 50–70% before any product is applied.

Understanding Disease Requirements

Most fungal pathogens require three conditions to infect: a susceptible host, a pathogenic

organism, and a favorable environment. While we cannot eliminate the pathogen from the

environment or always plant resistant varieties, we can manage environmental conditions to

prevent infection.

The critical environmental factors are leaf wetness duration, relative humidity, temperature, and

air movement. Botrytis cinerea, for example, requires at least 6 hours of continuous leaf

wetness at temperatures between 15–25°C to infect. Powdery mildew thrives at moderate

humidity without free water. Understanding these specific requirements for the diseases most

relevant to your crops guides which environmental factors to prioritize.

Ventilation: The Primary Tool

Proper greenhouse ventilation is the single most effective disease prevention practice available.

Opening vents reduces humidity, increases air movement through the canopy, and accelerates

drying of leaf surfaces after irrigation or condensation. Many greenhouse operators in Lebanon

under-ventilate out of concern for heat loss during winter — but the fungicide costs of resulting

disease outbreaks far exceed the heating costs of adequate ventilation.

Active ventilation using horizontal airflow fans further reduces humidity gradients within the

greenhouse. Continuous low-speed air movement is more effective than intermittent high-speed

ventilation.

Irrigation, Spacing, and Sanitation

Drip irrigation keeps foliage dry — eliminating the leaf wetness that foliar pathogens require.

The transition from overhead to drip typically reduces foliar disease incidence by 50–70% as a

standalone change.

Plant spacing that allows air circulation prevents humidity pockets within the canopy. Dense

plantings create microclimates with near-100% humidity even when the greenhouse average is

manageable.

Removing infected plant material — pruned leaves, dropped fruit, dead plants — removes

pathogen inoculum before it can reproduce and spread. This labor investment of 15 minutes per

greenhouse per day prevents exponential pathogen multiplication.

Conclusion

Cultural disease prevention is not an alternative to chemical management — it is the

prerequisite. Operations that manage their environment properly need far fewer fungicide

applications, and those applications are far more effective because they are treating

manageable rather than overwhelming pathogen pressure.

Key Takeaways

  • Proper ventilation is the single most effective and lowest-cost disease prevention tool in

greenhouse production.

  • Drip irrigation reduces foliar disease incidence by 50–70% compared to overhead

watering.

  • Plant spacing and sanitation prevent the humidity and inoculum accumulation that drive

epidemics.

  • Cultural prevention typically reduces fungicide requirements by 50–60% in well-

managed greenhouses.

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