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Control of Postharvest Botrytis Fruit Rot with Preharvest Fungicide Applications in Annual Strawberry

June 2001 , Volume 85 , Number  6
Pages  597 - 602

R. W. Blacharski , University of Florida, Gulf Coast Research and Education Center-Dover, 13138 Lewis Gallagher Road, Dover 33527 ; J. A. Bartz , University of Florida, Department of Plant Pathology, 1453 Fifield Hall, Gainesville 32611-0680 ; and C. L. Xiao and D. E. Legard , University of Florida, Gulf Coast Research and Education Center-Dover, 13138 Lewis Gallagher Road, Dover 33527



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Accepted for publication 13 February 2001.
ABSTRACT

The control of postharvest Botrytis fruit rot was evaluated during 1997-98 and 1998-99. Weekly applications of captan and thiram were examined at two or three different rates, respectively. Iprodione applications were combined with the captan and thiram treatments and also applied alone for two peak bloom periods. Strawberry fruit were harvested and graded twice weekly for marketable yield and preharvest incidence of Botrytis fruit rot. For postharvest evaluations, fruit from four harvests were selected and stored at 4°C, and Botrytis fruit rot incidence was recorded over 14 days of storage. Fungicide treatments reduced the incidence of preharvest Botrytis fruit rot and increased marketable yield. The incidence of postharvest Botrytis fruit rot was significantly affected by harvest date, length of time in storage, and fungicide treatment. The highest rate captan and thiram treatments had the least Botrytis fruit rot and the longest storage life. Reduced-rate captan and thiram treatments generally did not provide the same control as their respective high-rate treatments. Iprodione added to either the captan or thiram treatments did not consistently reduce the preharvest or postharvest incidence of Botrytis fruit rot or increase yield. Regular, full-rate fungicide treatments appear to be necessary to control Botrytis fruit rot in Florida and to provide the storage life necessary to reach distant markets.


Additional keywords: Fragaria ananassa, gray mold

© 2001 The American Phytopathological Society