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Pest and Disease Classification

Agricultural and Horticultural Studies
StudyPulse

Pest and Disease Classification

Agricultural and Horticultural Studies
01 May 2026

Characteristics of Metabolic, Metazoal and Microbial Pests and Diseases in Victorian Agriculture and Horticulture

Overview

Pests and diseases are classified by their nature and cause. Understanding the three main categories — metabolic, metazoal, and microbial — is essential for selecting appropriate prevention and control strategies. Each type interacts with host organisms in different ways and requires distinct management approaches.

VCAA FOCUS: You must be able to define each category, give examples, and describe the characteristics (signs, symptoms, transmission, impact) of each type affecting Victorian plants and/or animals.


Category 1: Metabolic Diseases

Definition

Metabolic diseases result from disruptions to normal metabolic processes within an organism — they are not caused by an external pathogen. They typically arise from:
- Nutritional deficiencies or imbalances
- Hormonal disruptions
- Organ dysfunction
- Environmental stress (e.g., heat, cold)

Key Characteristics

  • Not contagious — cannot spread from animal to animal or plant to plant by direct contact
  • Often related to diet, environment, or physiological stress
  • Onset can be rapid (e.g., hypocalcaemia in dairy cows after calving)
  • May be triggered by a specific life stage (e.g., pregnancy, lactation, rapid growth)

Examples in Animals

Disease Animal Cause Key Symptoms
Milk fever (hypocalcaemia) Dairy cows Low blood calcium at calving Muscle tremors, inability to stand, coma
Grass tetany (hypomagnesaemia) Cattle/sheep Low blood magnesium; lush spring grass Tremors, convulsions, sudden death
Bloat Cattle/sheep Excess gas in rumen; lush pasture Swollen left side of abdomen
Pregnancy toxaemia (twin lamb disease) Sheep Energy deficit in late pregnancy Weakness, head-pressing, death
Iron deficiency anaemia Pigs Insufficient iron; confined piglets Pale skin, reduced growth

Examples in Plants

Disorder Cause Symptoms
Chlorosis Iron or nitrogen deficiency Yellow leaves, reduced growth
Blossom end rot (tomato, capsicum) Calcium deficiency (often linked to irregular watering) Dark, sunken lesion at base of fruit
Tip burn (lettuce) Calcium deficiency in rapidly growing tissue Brown, necrotic leaf margins

KEY TAKEAWAY: Metabolic disorders are managed through nutrition management, soil/ration testing, and adjustments to feeding and environment — not through pesticides or antibiotics.


Category 2: Metazoal Pests

Definition

Metazoal pests are multicellular animal organisms (metazoa) that cause harm to agricultural plants and/or animals. They include insects, mites, nematodes, and larger parasites. They are visible to the naked eye (though some are small), and can act as:
- External parasites (ectoparasites) — live on the outside of the host
- Internal parasites (endoparasites) — live inside the host
- Plant-feeding pests — feed on plant tissue

Key Characteristics

  • Typically visible (at least some life stages)
  • Can spread directly between animals (contact) or via environment (soil, pasture)
  • Lifecycles often include multiple stages (egg, larva, adult)
  • Damage is caused by feeding, burrowing, or by triggering immune reactions

Examples Affecting Animals

Pest Animal Host Classification Damage/Symptoms
Intestinal worms (e.g., Haemonchus contortus — Barber’s Pole worm) Sheep, cattle, goats Endoparasite Anaemia, bottle jaw, weight loss, death in heavy infestations
Sheep lice (Bovicola ovis) Sheep Ectoparasite Intense itching, fleece damage (wool break), reduced wool value
Cattle tick (Rhipicephalus microplus) Cattle Ectoparasite Weight loss, anaemia; vector for tick fever (Babesia)
Blowfly strike Sheep Ectoparasite (larval stage) Maggots feeding on skin; severe tissue damage
Mites (mange) Pigs, poultry, cattle Ectoparasite Skin irritation, reduced production

Examples Affecting Plants

Pest Host Plant Classification Damage
Aphids Wide range (vegetables, cereals, ornamentals) Sap-sucking insect Sap removal, honeydew, sooty mould, virus vectors
Western flower thrips Vegetables, ornamentals Sap-sucking insect Silvery scarring, petal damage, TSWV virus vector
Root-knot nematodes Vegetables, fruit trees Endoparasite (nematode) Gall formation on roots; stunted growth
Codling moth Apples, pears Insect (larval stage) Larval tunnelling into fruit
Two-spotted mite Vegetables, grapes Arachnid Stippling of leaves; defoliation under heavy pressure

EXAM TIP: Aphids and western flower thrips are explicitly named in the VCAA study design — know their life cycles, damage patterns, and both chemical and non-chemical control options.


Category 3: Microbial Diseases (Pathogens)

Definition

Microbial diseases are caused by microscopic organisms (microorganisms) including:
- Bacteria — prokaryotic, single-celled
- Fungi — eukaryotic; can form spores
- Viruses — non-cellular; require a host to replicate
- Protozoa — unicellular eukaryotes
- Phytoplasmas — bacteria-like organisms in plant phloem

Key Characteristics

  • Contagious — most can spread through air, water, soil, contact, vectors, or contaminated equipment
  • Often cause rapid, widespread outbreaks if not controlled quickly
  • Require early identification for effective management
  • May have vectors (organisms that transmit the pathogen, e.g., aphids transmitting viruses)

Examples Affecting Animals

Disease Pathogen Type Animal Signs Transmission
Milk fever metabolic — see above
Footrot Dichelobacter nodosus (bacteria) Sheep, cattle, goats Lameness, foul-smelling interdigital lesion Soil, direct contact
Fungal rusts Puccinia spp. (fungi) Plants See below Airborne spores
Bovine Respiratory Disease (BRD) Multiple bacteria/viruses Cattle Fever, nasal discharge, coughing Stress, crowding
Newcastle Disease Virus (Paramyxovirus) Poultry Respiratory, neurological signs Highly contagious; notifiable

Examples Affecting Plants

Disease Pathogen Host Symptoms Spread
Fungal rusts (e.g., wheat stem rust, coffee rust) Puccinia spp. (fungi) Cereals, ornamentals Orange/brown powdery pustules on leaves and stems Airborne urediniospores
Phytophthora root rot Phytophthora spp. (oomycete) Avocado, fruit trees Root decay, yellowing, dieback Water movement in soil
Bacterial wilt Bacteria (Ralstonia solanacearum) Tomatoes, potatoes Sudden wilting; brown vascular tissue Soil, water
Botrytis (grey mould) Botrytis cinerea (fungus) Grapes, strawberries, vegetables Grey fluffy mould on fruit/leaves Airborne spores, humidity
Tomato Spotted Wilt Virus (TSWV) Virus Vegetables, ornamentals Bronze/spotted leaves; necrosis Western flower thrips vector

REMEMBER: Fungal rusts and footrot are explicitly listed in the VCAA study design — know both their biological nature (pathogen, lifecycle) and management strategies (see the control KK).


Summary Comparison Table

Feature Metabolic Metazoal Microbial
Cause Nutritional/physiological Multicellular animal organisms Microorganisms (bacteria, fungi, viruses, protozoa)
Contagious? No Some (e.g., external parasites) Generally yes
Visible? Visible symptoms Often visible (organism) Not visible; symptoms visible
Control approach Nutrition, management Pesticides, biologicals, vaccination Fungicides, antibiotics, vaccines, cultural methods
VCAA examples Milk fever Aphids, western flower thrips, intestinal worms Footrot, fungal rusts, milk fever (actually metabolic — note this!)

COMMON MISTAKE: Milk fever is a metabolic disease (low blood calcium) — not a microbial disease. Despite its name, it is not caused by a pathogen. Similarly, footrot is bacterial (microbial), not metabolic.


Summary

Understanding whether a pest or disease is metabolic, metazoal, or microbial determines the correct diagnosis pathway and management approach. Metabolic conditions require nutritional and management interventions; metazoal pests are controlled by targeting the organism directly; microbial pathogens require hygiene, chemical, biological, or vaccination strategies. All three categories threaten Victorian agricultural and horticultural productivity and must be managed within integrated, sustainable frameworks.

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