
Peach brown rot incidence related to pathogen infection at different stages of fruit development in an organic peach production system
C. Keske1, L. Amorim2 and L. L. May-De-Mio1*
Abstract
Brown rot, caused by Monilinia fructicola, is the most widespread disease for organic peach production systems in Brazil. The objective of this study was to determine the favorable periods for latent infection by M. fructicola in organic systems.
The field experiment was carried out during 2006, 2007 and 2008 using the cultivar Aurora. After thinning, fruits were bagged using white paraffin bags, and the treatments were performed by removing the bags and exposing the fruit for four days to the natural infection during each of seven fruit stages from pit hardening to harvest. Throughout the entire growing season, the conidial density and the weather variables were measured and related to the disease incidence using multiple regression analyses. At the fourth day after harvest in each season, the cumulative disease incidence was assessed, and it ranged from 40 to 98%.
The incidence of brown rot on fruit that were exposed during the embryo growing stage was lower than that of unbagged fruit throughout the entire season in 2006 and 2008. The relative humidity and the conidia density were significantly correlated to disease incidence.
Based on our results, M. fructicola can infect peaches during any stage of fruit development, and control of the disease must be revised to account for organic peach production systems.
Source
Crop Protection (2011) 30: 802-806
DOI: 10.1016/j.cropro.2011.03.005
Author Locations and Affiliations
(1) Department of Plant Protection, Federal University of Paraná, Rua dos Funcionários, 1540 Curitiba, PR, Brazil
(2) Department of Plant Pathology, University of São Paulo, Caixa Postal 09, Piracicaba, PR, Brazil=
* Corresponding author, E-mail maydemio@ufpr.br
Posted June 2011
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