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Publication no. D-2000-0331-02R
Environmental Factors Affecting the Severity of Alternaria Brown Spot of
Citrus and Their Potential Use in Timing Fungicide Applications. L. W.
Timmer, Professor, H. M. Darhower and S. E. Zitko, Senior Biologists, T. L.
Peever, Assistant in Plant Pathology, and A. M. Ibáñez and P. M. Bushong,
Senior Biologists, University of Florida, Citrus Research and Education Center,
700 Experiment Station Road, Lake Alfred 33850. Plant Dis. 84:638-643. Accepted
for publication 28 February 2000. Copyright 2000 The American Phytopathological
Society.
Alternaria brown spot affects many tangerines and their hybrids, causing
lesions on leaves, twigs, and fruit resulting in reduced yield and fruit
quality. Field studies were conducted in a severely affected Minneola tangelo
grove in central Florida from 1996 to 1998 to determine the environmental
factors associated with infection of field trees and potted trap plants.
Conidial production peaked following large flushes of new leaves, which were
heavily infected. Most infections occurred during the summer rainy season, but
trap plants became infected nearly every week of the year. When plants were
exposed for 1-week periods, linear regression analysis indicated that disease
severity on trap plants was positively related to the amount of rainfall,
duration of leaf wetness, and average daily temperatures, and negatively related
to the number of conidia trapped. Similar relationships occurred with trap
plants exposed for 24-h periods on 141 different dates, except that temperature
was not a significant factor. Nevertheless, these factors individually or
combined in stepwise multiple regressions explained only a low percentage of the
variability in disease severity with both weekly and daily trap plant sampling.
When daily environmental data were categorized as: (i) rain versus no rain, (ii)
<10 h or >10 h leaf wetness duration, and (iii) average temperature
<20°C, 20 to 28°C, and >28°C, relationships to disease severity on trap
plants were clearer. Disease severity on days with rain was nearly double that
of days without rain, but considerable infection occurred on days with >10 h
leaf wetness duration and no rain. Infection was greatest on days with
temperatures of 20 to 28°C and slightly less at lower or higher temperatures. A
point system, called the ALTER–RATER, was designed whereby each day would be
assigned a severity value according to the prevailing environmental conditions.
A fungicide application would be made after a predetermined number of points had
accumulated. Simulated spray programs based on accumulation of 50, 75, 100, and
150 points from historical weather data at several locations indicated that from
8 to 15, 6 to 8, 5 to 6, or 3 to 4 sprays, respectively, would be needed
depending on year and location in Florida. Such a weather-based control system
could reduce the number of fungicide applications and improve control of
Alternaria brown spot of tangerine.
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