At various intervals after inoculation of the roots of groundnut plants with the fungus Macrophomina phaseoli, 14CO2 was administered to branch 2 (from the base) of the plants in the light. The effects of the disease on the translocation of 14C-photosynthates out of the source branch to the rest of the plant were studied 24 h after labelling. As the plant aged and the disease symptom development became more evident, an increasing percentage of the fixed 14C-photosynthates was exported from branch 2 of the inoculated plants (IP) compared to the non-inoculated plants (NIP). The apex, main stem, and branch 1 of NIP imported more of the total fixed 14C throughout the developmental stages of the plant except for day 10 after inoculation when branch 1 of IP imported almost 76 % of the total fixed 14C. The roots of IP were the major sink and imported higher percent of the total fixed 14C than the roots of NIP.