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Publication no. D-2003-0221-01R
Effects of Temperature and Water Vapor Pressure on Conidial Germination and
Lesion Expansion of Sphaerotheca macularis f. sp. fragariae.
T. C. Miller and W. D. Gubler, Department of Plant Pathology, S. Geng,
Department of Agronomy and Range Science, and D. M. Rizzo, Department of Plant
Pathology, University of California, Davis 95616. Plant Dis. 87:484-492.
Accepted for publication 24 November 2002. Copyright 2003 The American
Phytopathological Society.
Conidial germination in vitro and foliar lesion expansion were studied for Sphaerotheca
macularis f. sp. fragariae. Detached strawberry (Fragaria × ananassa)
leaves were inoculated, then held in controlled environments of constant
temperatures (4 to 36ºC) and relative humidity (RH, 32 to 100%) representing
the range of these variables observed under California commercial production
conditions. Percent germination and lesion expansion rate were determined by
destructive subsampling over time. Conidia germinated at all temperatures by 6 h
and reached a maximum by 48 h, with the optimum near 20°C. Lesions were marked
with the aid of a microscope and measured by computer-assisted image-analysis to
determine expansion rate. Maximal rates occurred at 25°C. Several growth models
were fit to the expansion rate data with high significance. Predicted optima
from these models ranged from 22 to 27°C and/or 17 to 27 mm Hg
VP(water@100%RH). Neither RH, partial vapor pressure of water (VP(water)), nor
vapor pressure deficit (VPD) correlated with lesion expansion rate, adding to
studies minimizing the importance of RH and VPD as determinants of asexual phase
powdery mildew growth other than specifically at spore germination.
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