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1.
Factors affecting the occurrence of gangrene (Phoma exigua) in potatoes   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The presence in soil from Scotland and England of Phoma exigua f. sp. exigua and P. exigua f.sp. foveata, which cause gangrene, is confirmed by isolation, and it is established that infection of tubers occurs before lifting, and after lifting from soil adhering to tubers. The distribution of the disease is related to soil moisture, gangrene being most prevalent in tubers from the north-eastern counties of Scotland where the moisture content of arable soils remains high throughout the growing season. The incidence of the disease may be affected by the haulm, either as a source of infection—though not an important source—or by its effect on the maturity of the tubers. The incidence of gangrene is less where haulm destruction is rapid. The incidence of gangrene in a crop is not related to its incidence in the seed tubers planted and, unless infection is severe, the effect on yield is not serious. Symptoms of skin necrosis were associated with tubers from acid soils, infected with P. exigua f.sp. foveata and stored at low temperature.  相似文献   

2.
Over 3 yr, the development of dry rot, caused by Fusarium solani var. coeruleum, and the efficacy of treating potato tubers with imazalil was examined in relation to the date of haulm destruction and harvest, and the interval between haulm destruction using diquat dibromide and harvest. The effect of these factors on skin set was also assessed. Planting inoculated seed tubers bearing small rots produced more dry rot on the daughter tubers than planting naturally contaminated seed tubers in 1992. The incidence of dry rot was higher on daughter tubers wounded by a standardised method than on those passed over a reciprocating riddle (riddling). The relationship between the two assessment methods was significantly (P<0.05) correlated in 2 out of 3 yr. Overall, the interval between haulm destruction and harvest had less effect on the incidence of dry rot on daughter tubers after riddling than the date of harvest. In 2 out of 3 yr, the incidence of dry rot on riddled tubers was least on those harvested in August and was much greater on September‐harvested tubers. On tubers harvested in October, the pattern was variable, with the incidence declining in 1 yr but increasing in the other. In the third year, the development of dry rot was similar on August‐ and September‐harvested tubers and was least on those harvested in October. Dipping tubers in imazalil gave significant reductions in dry rot although the amount of the reduction was variable and not affected by time of treatment or the amount of fungicide deposited within the range 6.7 to 19.4 mg imazalil kg?1. Skin set at harvest, as measured by skin strength or the amount of scuff damage, increased the later the tubers were harvested but did not appear to be affected by the interval between haulm destruction and harvest.  相似文献   

3.
An assessment was made over 3 years of the efficacy of thiabendazole, 2–aminobutane and a formulation of a mixture of thiabendazole and 2–aminobutane in controlling gangrene, skin spot and dry rot when applied either at harvest or after grading at different dates during the storage season.
After harvest applications, the incidence of gangrene was least on tubers treated with the mixture and generally greatest with thiabendazole. When applied after grading the efficacy of the fungicides was not affected by date of grading. Although 2–aminobutane applications at harvest or after grading were equally effective in controlling gangrene, thiabendazole and the mixture were less effective after grading where gangrene was prevalent in a stock. Thiabendazole and the mixture gave good control of dry rot when applied at harvest but were less effective when applied after grading, particularly late in the storage season. Dry rot was sometimes more prevalent on tubers fumigated with 2–aminobutane, especially those treated after grading. Skin spot was more effectively controlled by the mixture and 2–aminobutane than by thiabendazole but, with applications after grading, the efficacy of all fungicides declined the later the date of grading.
Plants grown from tubers treated with the mixture or its 2–aminobutane glycollate constituent exhibited characteristics associated with genetic variation.  相似文献   

4.
Potato seed tubers of six cultivars from commercial stocks and from stocks derived from stem cuttings (healthier seed) were fumigated with 2-aminobutane 2 wk after lifting or treated with benomyl or thiabendazole in January. 2-aminobutane prevented skin spot and gangrene developing on treated tubers. Experiments were planted at Rothamsted (clay with flints soil) and at Woburn (sandy loam soil) in 1973–75. Healthier seed produced more stems/plant than commercial stocks and yielded on average 8% more at Rothamsted in 1973 and 1974 and respectively 5 and 10% more at Woburn in 1973 and 1975. Seed treatments did not consistently affect stem numbers or increase yield although all treatments tended to decrease tuber size. Infection of stem bases and tubers by Polyscytalum pustulans and Rhizoctonia solani was usually less from healthier than from commercial seed and was decreased by benomyl and thiabendazole in 1973 and 1974. Infection by Helminthosporium solani of the skin around tuber eyes was greater from healthier than from commercial seed but was decreased by benomyl and thiabendazole. 2-aminobutane sometimes decreased infection of tubers by P. pustulans and R. solani but neither of stem bases nor of tubers by H. solani. Gangrene on tubers uniformly wounded at lifting was not consistently affected by seed source or seed treatment. Treating seed with benomyl or thiabendazole in 1975 decreased skin spot and black scurf in tubers stored until March 1976. These treatments also decreased silver scurf on the produce of commercial seed at Rothamsted but gangrene was not consistently affected by seed treatments.  相似文献   

5.
In an experiment designed to measure the effect of foliar sprays of fungicides on gangrene in stored tubers thiabendazole but not captafol reduced yield by 30%. Although both fungicides reduced disease incidence in stems and tubers the extent of the reduction was so small that foliar sprays were considered unimportant as a method of control. Sprays of thiabendazole and captafol applied to the haulm 1 wk or 1 wk and 2 wk after desiccation did not reduce the incidence of gangrene in storage.  相似文献   

6.
To determine the relative importance of seed tubers and stems as sources of inoculum for potato gangrene in progeny tubers, different levels of inoculum of Phoma exigua var. foveata were established in field experiments by planting rotting or contaminated seed tubers and by inoculating stems shortly before haulm desiccation. The pathogen was only occasionally detected by isolation from inside green stems in June and July on plants growing from contaminated but unrotted seed. The incidence of pycnidia on desiccated stems increased with increasing concentration of inoculum contaminating seed tubers and with increasing time interval between desiccation and harvest. Stem infection was probably derived from inoculum on seed tubers spreading via the soil to the stem bases. Stem inoculation of plants growing from uninoculated or uncontaminated seed greatly increased both the gangrene potential of progeny tubers (defined as % wounds with gangrene after uniformly damaging tubers and storing them at 5°C for 12 wk), and tuber contamination (defined as % wounds with gangrene after spreading tuber-borne soil onto test tuber slices and storing them at 5°C for 8 wk). However, when stems of plants growing from rotting or contaminated seed were cut at ground level and removed before desiccation, gangrene potential of progeny tubers was only slightly less than that of tubers from untreated plots. There was no evidence that soil inoculum or aerial spread played a significant role in disease development. Gangrene potential and contamination of progeny tubers were related to Contamination levels on seed tubers. Some transmission also occurred from rotted seed tubers to progeny. Inoculum levels around progeny tubers increased rapidly after desiccation even in plots where stems had previously been cut at soil level and removed to eliminate pycnidial development above ground as a source of inoculum. Both gangrene potential and contamination of progeny tubers were greater on cv. Ulster Sceptre than on cv. Pentland Crown. The results showed that the inoculum on seed tubers, whether from rots or surface contamination, contributed more to the contamination of progeny tubers at harvest than did the inoculum from pycnidia on stems following desiccation of the haulm.  相似文献   

7.
Over 6 yr the effectiveness of imazalil, prochloraz and fenpiclonil, applied either alone or in a mixture, in controlling gangrene, dry rot, skin spot and silver scurf on potato tubers in store was compared with that of 2-aminobutane and thiabendazole. An assessment was also made of their efficiency in controlling the development of these diseases on the daughter tubers of seed tubers treated at harvest or before planting. Overall, 2-aminobutane was more effective in controlling gangrene (Phoma foveata) in store than the spray-applied fungicides. Deposits of imazalil, thiabendazole and fenpiclonil were greater when sprays were applied with an electrostatic sprayer than with a hydraulic sprayer. The opposite was found with the mixture of prochloraz Mn and tolclofos-methyl. More effective gangrene control was associated with the highest deposits. Fenpiclonil and the mixture of thiabendazole and imazalil were more effective in controlling dry rot (Fusarium solani var. coeruleum) than imazalil alone. The development of dry rot was, however, increased by 2-aminobutane treatment on eight out of 14 stocks. 2-aminobutane gave the greatest reduction (83%) in the severity of skin spot during storage whereas thiabendazole alone, and the mixture of thiabendazole and imazalil, gave mean reductions of 70% and 65% respectively. This mixture and fenpiclonil gave the greatest reduction in the severity of silver scurf although, in general, reductions in silver scurf with fungicide treatment were less than with skin spot. The type of sprayer used to apply a fungicide did not affect the effectiveness of the fungicides in controlling either skin spot or silver scurf on tubers in store, or on the daughter tubers. The incidence of gangrene and dry rot on daughter tubers was not reduced consistently by fungicide treatment of seed tubers of the six stocks tested. However, the severity of skin spot and silver scurf was reduced by fungicide treatments of all eight stocks but the reduction in disease was greater for skin spot than for silver scurf. All fungicides gave reductions in the severity of skin spot, and fenpiclonil and the mixture of thiabendazole and imazalil were the most effective for silver scurf. The effectiveness of the fungicides in controlling these diseases was similar for seed treated at harvest and that treated before planting.  相似文献   

8.
Damage to potatoes during harvesting and grading increases the incidence of gangrene. Among the factors involved, the condition of the soil and the type of damage caused by the implements may be of importance. Gangrene is most evident in tubers which have been stored cold or moved when cold; warmer storage at some stage usually reduces its incidence and severity. Seasonal incidence is not directly related to rainfall but is determined by factors affecting ripening and destruction of haulm, moisture status of soils at harvest, susceptibility to damage, and exposure during storage and in transit.  相似文献   

9.
In experiments with commercial seed of different cultivars at Rothamsted and Woburn, Bedfordshire in 1985 – 88 the severity of black dot on daughter tubers at harvest differed between cultivars. The disease was most severe on Desiree tubers. Amounts of disease were similar at both sites in 1986 – 88 but in 1985 it was more severe at Woburn than at Rothamsted. Disease-free seed of 12 (1987) or 15 (1988) cultivars were planted in experiments at Rothamsted (inoculated with Colletotrichum coccodes or not) and at Mepal, Cambridgeshire (not inoculated) and black dot assessed at harvest in October 1987 and in September and October 1988. There were significant differences in the amount of disease on different cultivars and the order of severity was similar at the two sites, on the two harvest dates in 1988 and in both years. Desiree, Maris Piper, Maris Peer and Record were amongst those cultivars severely affected whereas Cara, Pentland Crown and Romano were least affected. Skin discoloration caused by black dot was more noticeable on white-skinned than red-skinned cultivars and was severe on the Dutch cultivars Estima, Marfona, Santé and Wilja.  相似文献   

10.
In March 1977 and 1978 King Edward seed potatoes from three commercial stocks and one stock derived from stem cuttings (healthier seed) were treated with thiabendazole at 320 g a.i./t and 46% of the material applied was deposited on tubers. Seed was stored on trays to sprout and in April samples were planted in replicated plots on two farms in Lincolnshire. Treatment did not consistently affect numbers of stemslplant or total yields but decreased infection of underground stems by Polyscytalum pustulans and Rhizoctonia solani and of tubers at harvest by P. pustulans, R. solani and Helminthosporium solani. In samples stored for 20 wk at Sutton Bridge Experimental Station seed treatment decreased the incidence of skin spot from 25 to 4%, of black scurf from 36 to 20% but had less effect on silver scurf (untreated 52% tubers, treated 47%) and did not affect the incidence of black dot (Colletotrichum coccodes) on stored tubers. In another series of experiments 1 t samples of seed from six King Edward stocks (1977) and four King Edward and one Maris Piper stocks (1978), collected from different farms in Lincolnshire in March, were treated with thiabendazole at 40 g a.i./t. Tubers retained 48% of the material applied. The treated seed was planted on the respective farms in a single large plot adjacent to untreated seed similarly stored and sprouted. Seed treatment significantly decreased the incidence of skin spot, black scurf, silver scurf and gangrene in tubers stored at Sutton Bridge in 1977–78. After lifting the experiment in 1978 samples from treated and untreated seed were treated with thiabendazole (40 g a.i./t) before storage (ware treatment). Skin spot was decreased more by seed treatment than ware treatment whereas silver scurf was controlled best by ware treatment. Incidence of black dot was not consistently affected by seed or ware treatment.  相似文献   

11.
In studies of the influence of haulm defoliants on gangrene incidence in storage the use of diquat dibromide was consistently found to exacerbate levels of Phoma exigua vzr.foveata infection particularly on tubers harvested 3–4 wk after burning down. Intermediate levels occurred where the haulm was chemically defoliated with dinoseb or was physically cut and removed and least where the defoliants were sodium chlorate or sulphuric acid. Pycnidia of P. exigua var. foveata developed within 10 days on stems desiccated with diquat dibromide, sulphuric acid or dinoseb and most prolifically on those treated with diquat dibromide but tuber infection was not always related to their abundance. Speed of kill was not considered to be important in determining effect on gangrene incidence.  相似文献   

12.
In experiments extending over 3 yr, King Edward tubers harvested on various dates from early September until early November were uniformly wounded and kept at 15 oC and c. 95% r.h. for periods of up to 21 days for wounds to cure. When tubers were subsequently inoculated with Phoma exigua var.foveata and incubated at 5 oC for 12 wk, curing for 3 and 7 days decreased gangrene incidence to respectively c. 13 and 4% of the non-cured controls. When tubers were inoculated before curing and immediately after wounding, curing for 7 days decreased gangrene incidence to only c. 68% of the non-cured controls. Curing was also progressively less effective the later the date of harvesting, suggesting that there would be advantages in harvesting potato crops early in the autumn.  相似文献   

13.
Standardized inoculations of the potato varieties Catriona and Doon Star over 6 years have shown that shortening the growth period, either by deferring planting or by removing the haulm prematurely, may considerably reduce susceptibility of the tubers to dry rot (Fusarium caeruleum). Although these treatments reduce dry-matter content of the tubers, no direct relationship between this factor and susceptibility was established. High pre-maturity susceptibility was confirmed at the time of flowering; as the haulm matured susceptibility decreased: when the haulm was dead tubers were resistant. Within a fortnight after any time of premature haulm removal, tubers became completely resistant and showed a decrease in sucrose content but not in content of reducing sugars. It is suggested that susceptibility in the immature tuber is closely related to the content of sucrose, which accumulates because of rapid translocation from the vigorously growing haulm. After harvest, tuber susceptibility slowly increased during storage, with an increase mainly in reducing sugars, but these two factors were not directly related. An application of 6 cwt/acre (753 kg/ha) of 12:12:18 NPK fertilizer to Catriona significantly reduced liability to infection. Additional nitrogen (6 cwt/acre ammonium sulphate) raised tuber susceptibility to that in a non-fertilized plot: when sulphate of ammonia was the only treatment given, the tubers were significantly more susceptible than those receiving complete fertilizer.  相似文献   

14.
Potato titbers infested with Phoma exigua var. foveata were uniformly wounded and sprayed or dipped in fungicide suspensions either immediately or after periods of up to 21 days' storage at 5, 10, 15 or 20 °C. Tubers were then stored at 5 °C and gangrene assessed after 12 wk. Incidence of gangrene on untreated tubers was progressively decreased by increasing the length of storage at 15 or 20° (curing) but was not affected by 3 days' storage at any temperature. Fungicide treatment immediately after wounding gave best control of the disease; treatment after 3 days' delay was less effective and after 14 or 21 days was usually ineffective. Gangrene was decreased by fungicides more on tubers stored for 3 or 7 days at 5 °C than at higher temperatures. Control of gangrene by curing or fungicides diminished when the amount of inoculum on tubers was increased. Increasing the amount of fungicide applied improved control and fungicides were more effective in decreasing gangrene on cut and crush wounds than on cut wounds. At the arbitrary concentrations used in these experiments imazalil gave better disease control than thiabendazole, prochloraz, carbendazim plus quinolin 8-ol or triadimefon.  相似文献   

15.
Potato seed tubers of seven cultivars derived from stem cuttings in 1965 (healthier seed) were compared with samples from commercial stocks in 1969–72 at two sites, one clay with flints soil (Rothamsted) and the other sandy loam soil (Woburn). Plant emergence, usually slower from non-sprouted seed, was unaffected by seed source or seed treatment with benomyl. Sprouted healthier seed produced more stems/plant than sprouted commercial seed. Healthier seed yielded 6% (Rothamsted 5%, Woburn 8%) more than commercial when seed was sprouted and 7% (Rothamsted 6%, Woburn 9%) when not sprouted. The increased yields of cvs Record (10% sprouted, 23% not sprouted), Majestic (8% sprouted, 11% not sprouted) and King Edward (5% not sprouted) mostly comprised small ware (44–57 cm) and chats (>44 cm), indicating an increase in tuber numbers. Commercial Pentland Crown seed yielded as much as healthier but the healthier produced less large ware (57–83 cm). Benomyl treatment of commercial seed, especially when not sprouted, and sometimes of healthier seed also decreased tuber size. Infection of stem bases and tuber eyes by Polyscytalum pustulans was less from healthier than commercial seed and was decreased by benomyl. Stem canker (Rhizoctonia solani) was also decreased by benomyl but fungicide treatment of seed did not greatly decrease the high incidence of R. solani hyphae on eyes of tubers at Woburn. Helminthosporium solani, equally prevalent on the produce of commercial and healthier seed, was decreased by benomyl. There was slightly more gangrene (Phoma exigua) on the produce of commercial than healthier seed.  相似文献   

16.
The incidence of Phoma exigua var. foveata and Polyscytalum pustulans in dry soil and dust from potato stores was assessed at 10 farms in Scotland producing virus-tested stocks of seed potatoes derived from stem cuttings (VTSC). Samples were collected on three occasions during 1976: during the storage period (February-March), soon after the potatoes were planted (May) and just before the new crop was lifted and stored (August-October). Both pathogens were detected at all three sampling times but P. exigua var. foveata was more frequently detected at the last one than P. pustulans. Soil and dust from various sites within the stores, such as floors, ledges, graders and boxes, were contaminated by these pathogens. Propagules of both pathogens remained airborne for at least 12–17 min after the floors were swept. P. exigua var. foveata remained viable for at least 16 months in dry soil from tuber surfaces stored at 4–6°C. When VTSC tubers were dusted before planting with a dry store soil contaminated by P. exigua var. foveata the gangrene potential of the progeny tubers was much greater than that from untreated tubers or from tubers treated with an uncontaminated soil. The role of inoculum surviving in dry soil is discussed in relation to reinfection of VTSC stocks.  相似文献   

17.
Fungus diseases on potato seed tubers planted in England and Wales, 1963-76   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
During 1963-76 samples of potato tubers from commercial seed stocks of cvs King Edward (14 yr), Pentland Crown (9 yr), Majestic (7 yr), Pentland Dell (3 yr), Record and Arran Pilot (2 yr) were received from farms in England and Wales. Fifty tubers from each sample were examined macroscopically for fungus diseases and eyes were excised from a 20-tuber sub-sample, incubated and examined for pathogenic fungi; 50 tubers were stored on trays to sprout and examined for diseases and sprouting in May and in most years samples of 50 tubers were wounded by dropping onto expanded metal, stored at 5° C and examined for gangrene and dry rot after 12 wk. Amounts of disease varied between years and during 14 yr black scurf and powdery scab on King Edward tended to increase and skin spot and late blight decrease. On average 44% of King Edward tubers were affected with skin spot, 25% with black scurf and 16% with powdery scab. Gangrene affected 5% of tubers and 97% of the isolates from rots were identified as Phoma exigua var. foveata. Wounding tubers increased the incidence of gangrene three-fold. During 1963-69 late blight affected 2% of King Edward tubers but fewer in later years and in other cultivars. Majestic had most common scab (44% tubers) and Arran Pilot most dry rot (9% tubers) and this disease was increased by wounding tubers. Conidiophores of Helminthosporium solani (silver scurf) were more common on excised eyes of Pentland Crown, Record and Arran Pilot than of other cultivars, and isolations from verticillate conidiophores that developed on the side of incubated eye plugs of King Edward and Majestic stocks gave pure cultures of Verticillium tricorpus (78%), V. nigrescens (9%) and V. nubilum (3%). Proportions of tubers with different diseases were affected by their country of origin; Scottish seed had most skin spot and gangrene, Irish seed most powdery scab and English seed most common scab, late blight and H. solani. There was also evidence of differing disease incidence in seed from different geographical areas in Scotland and England. Up to half the King Edward and Pentland Crown stocks examined in 1975 and 1976 were derived from stem cuttings and average amounts of diseased tubers were similar to those in stocks not derived from stem cuttings. Annual and cultivar differences in disease incidence and effects of date of receipt of seed on farms are discussed.  相似文献   

18.
The susceptibility to gangrene infection of wounds of various shapes and depths on potato tubers was studied by inflicting wounds using differently-shaped brass teeth and rods of different diameters. Inoculating wounds with spore suspensions or damaging tubers which had been previously contaminated with Phoma exigua var. foveata or which had been recently lifted from plots of field experiments showed that wounds in which tissue was crushed were most susceptible to infection. Over a wide range of inoculum concentrations and in experiments using several different cultivars the incidence of infection of any wound type was compared to that of the standard severe cut and crush wound. Using a probit transformation a linear relationship was established, the slope of the line indicating the relative susceptibility of the wound. In 1977 and 1978, crops of cv. Pentland Dell were surveyed for damage incidence, inoculum and inoculum potential on arrival at a commercial bulk store. Nets of tubers buried among the tuber bulk were recovered after storage and gangrene incidence compared with damage and inoculum assessments. Inoculum potential and incidence of severe damage both influenced disease development but damage incidence was of greater importance, showing that priority should be given to decreasing damage and to curing to promote rapid wound healing in endeavours to control the disease.  相似文献   

19.
During falls of rain before 5% of the haulm was destroyed by blight, most rain water was deposited on soil at the bottom of the ridge, and least at the top in crops of King Edward, Majestic, and Up-to-Date potatoes. Afterwards less water was trapped half way up the side of the ridge than above or below. Water was also channelled down the stems and, while these were upright, was deposited in the channel often formed around the stem bases by wind movement. Fewer than 500 sporangia per ml. were seen in water collected when blight was present in the crop. Growing tubers of Ulster Ensign and King Edward, inoculated with P. infestans, infected healthy tubers less than 1–3 cm. away, when the soil water content was greater than 20%, and sporulation on the inoculated tubers was maximal. Similarly inoculated Up-to-Date and Majestic tubers sporulated less abundantly and failed to infect healthy tubers. Sporulation also occurred on inoculated seed tubers, although infection of the haulm from these tubers could not be confirmed. Water movement from the seed tuber region to the furrows may occur under suitable conditions.  相似文献   

20.
The effects of 10 fungicides on the growth of Colletotrichum coccodes in agar culture and on the germination of conidia was investigated. In field experiments in 1990 and 1991 the extent to which treating black dot-affected potato seed tubers with fungicides affected the development of the disease on stem bases, roots and tubers was assessed. Black dot was also assessed on plants from field trials in 1990 which were designed to investigate the efficacy of the soil sterilant 1,3-dichloropropene (Telone) and two nematicides, aldicarb (Temik) and ethoprophos (Mocap). Prochloraz and fenpiclonil were the most effective fungicides in decreasing the size of C. coccodes colonies on agar. Imazalil, propiconazole and dichlorophen were also effective, but at higher concentrations, whereas tolclofos-methyl, thiabendazole and benomyl were only moderately effective. Resistant sectors developed from inhibited colonies on agar containing fenpiclonil and tolclofos-methyl. Conidial germination was prevented at 1 mg/litre fenpiclonil and 5 mg/ litre dichlorophen; imazalil, benomyl and thiabendazole were also moderately effective. Fenpiclonil and propiconazole seed tuber treatments consistently decreased black dot infection on roots, stem bases and daughter tubers early in the season, but only fenpiclonil decreased disease on tubers at harvest in October. Propiconazole also delayed emergence and decreased stem numbers. Soil treatment with 1,3-dichloropropene, aldicarb or ethoprophos had no effect on black dot but Rhizoctonia solani tuber infection and black scurf were increased.  相似文献   

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