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Interface of the environment and occurrence of Botrytis cinerea in pre-symptomatic tomato crops.

Authors :
Wakeham, Alison
Langton, Allen
Adams, Steve
Kennedy, Roy
Source :
Crop Protection (02612194); Dec2016, Vol. 90, p27-33, 7p
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Botrytis cinerea (Grey mould) is a necrotrophic fungus infecting over 230 plant species worldwide. It can cause major pre- and post-harvest diseases of many agronomic and horticultural crops. Botrytis cinerea causes annual economic losses of 10–100 billion US dollars worldwide and instability in the food supply (Jin and Wu, 2015). Grey mould losses, either at the farm gate or later in the food chain, could be reduced with improved knowledge of inoculum availability during production. In this paper, we report on the ability to monitor Botrytis spore concentration in glasshouse tomato production ahead of symptom development on plants. Using a light weight and portable air sampler (microtitre immunospore trap) it was possible to quantify inoculum availability within hours. Also, this study investigated the spatial aspect of the pathogen with an increase of B. cinerea concentration in bio-aerosols collected in the lower part of the glasshouse (0.5 m) and adjacent to the trained stems of the tomato plants. No obvious relationship was observed between B. cinerea concentration and the internal glasshouse environmental parameters of temperature and relative humidity. However the occurrence of higher outside wind speeds did increase the prevalence of B. cinerea conidia in the cropping environment of a vented glasshouse. Knowledge of inoculum availability at time periods when the environmental risk of pathogen infection is high should improve the targeted use and effectiveness of control inputs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
02612194
Volume :
90
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Crop Protection (02612194)
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
118498741
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cropro.2016.08.014