The stimulating effect of some fungicides on Glomerella cingulata in relation to the control of coffee berry disease |
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Authors: | F. J. NUTMAN F. M. ROBERTS |
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Affiliation: | East African Agriculture and Forestry Research Organization, P.O. Box 30148, Nairobi, Kenya |
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Abstract: | The non-parasitic strain of Colletotrichum coffeanum Noack which colonizes the maturing wood of Coffea arabica produces its perfect stage (Glomerella cingulata) on the branches. Assessments of the relative abundance of this in relation to preceding rainfall have shown that for unsprayed branches, but rarely for sprayed ones, the correlation is negative and highly significant. Various fungicides stimulate G. cingulata greatly, and this stimulation persists for many months. One other saprophytic component of the micro–flora is similarly stimulated, but with two others all the fungicides used depress sporulation. It is suggested that when the main source of infection of coffee berries is the pathogenic conidia from the wood, the mechanism of long–term control by early–season sprays may lie partly in this stimulation of some fungal competitors of the pathogen. |
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