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Publication no. P-1997-0602-02R
Epidemiology
Effect of Strawberry Density on the Spread of Anthracnose Caused
by Colletotrichum acutatum. L. V. Madden and M. A.
Boudreau. First author: Department of Plant Pathology, The Ohio
State University, Wooster 44691-4096; and second author: Department
of Biology, Warren Wilson College, Asheville, NC 28815-9000. Phytopathology
87:828-838. Accepted for publication 2 May 1997. Copyright 1997
The American Phytopathological Society.
Spread of strawberry anthracnose, resulting from the rain splash
dispersal of Colletotrichum acutatum conidia, was determined
in field plots by assessing fruit disease incidence at a range
of distances from an introduced point source of infected fruit
with sporulating lesions. Four within-row plant densities were
established in replicated plots in each of 2 years. A generalized
linear model with a logit link function and binomial distribution
for incidence was used to quantify the effects of distance and
side of the row relative to the inoculum source, plant density
treatment, and their interactions on disease incidence. At all
assessment times, there was a significant (P <= 0.05)
decline in incidence with increasing distance from the spore source.
Moreover, row side had a significant effect, with the near side
having higher incidence than the far side. Plant density treatment
had a significant, but nonlinear, effect on incidence, with incidence
generally declining with increasing density. Side of the row relative
to the inoculum source and density treatment could affect the
steepness of the disease gradient (slope) as well as the overall
level of disease incidence, depending on the assessment time and
year. The combined effects of plant density and row side on the
height and steepness of the disease gradients could be measured
using the predicted distance in which incidence equals 10% (d(10)).
Estimated d(10) generally increased in a nonlinear manner
with decreasing plant density. Also, plant density had a significant
negative effect on the proportion of incident rain that penetrated
the canopy. In a separate study, plant density did not consistently
affect infection of fruit that had been placed within the canopy
immediately after being inoculated in the laboratory with a controlled
inoculum density, indicating that conditions favoring infection
were similar for the four densities. Thus, differences in mean
disease incidence and disease gradients among the treatments were
mostly due to differences in dispersal and not to other components
of the disease cycle. As previously reported for controlled studies
using a rain simulator, however, the effects of plant density
on dispersal were complex, and increasing density did not universally
lead to decreasing disease incidence. Additional keywords:
Fragaria × ananassa, quantitative epidemiology.
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