The Effects of Postharvest Hot Water and Fungicide Treatments on Guignardia citricarpa Growth and the Development of Citrus Black Spot Symptoms on 'Valencia' Orange Fruit

被引:0
|
作者
Yan, Jiaqi [1 ]
Dewdney, Megan M. [2 ]
Roberts, Pamela D. [3 ]
Ritenour, Mark A. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Florida, Indian River Res & Educ Ctr, 2199 South Rock Rd, Ft Pierce, FL 34945 USA
[2] Univ Florida, Citrus Res & Educ Ctr, 700 Expt Stn Rd, Lake Alfred, FL 33850 USA
[3] Univ Florida, Southwest Florida Res & Educ Ctr, 2685 State Rd 29, North Immokalee, FL 34142 USA
关键词
Phyllosticta citricarpa; mycelial growth; lesion development; disease incidence; peel scalding; fruit quality; PENICILLIUM-DIGITATUM; GREEN MOLD; FLORIDA; GRAPEFRUIT; RESISTANCE; INDUCTION; IMAZALIL; EFFICACY;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
S6 [园艺];
学科分类号
0902 ;
摘要
Citrus black spot (CBS), caused by Guignardia citricarpa, is a fungal disease that was first described in Australia in the 1890s and has since been discovered in Southwest Florida in 2010. The current study evaluated the effects of hot water treatments on mycelial growth of G. citricarpa in vitro and also evaluated postharvest hot-water dips and fungicide treatments on CBS development on 'Valencia' oranges. In vitro exposure to 56 degrees C for 120 seconds, 59 degrees C for 60 seconds, or 62 degrees C for 30 seconds suppressed mycelial growth of all three G. citricarpa isolates by >30%. These treatments did not significantly reduce disease incidence or severity of CBS lesion development on whole 'Valencia' oranges from CBS-infected trees when the fruit already had visible CBS symptoms before treatment. On asymptomatic fruit, while the treatments did not significantly reduce the incidence of CBS lesion development, fruit dipped in 56 degrees C water for 120 seconds significantly reduced disease severity after 2 weeks of storage compared with the control. None of the treatments caused peel scalding or fruit quality deterioration. Postharvest application of azoxystrobin, imazalil, or thiabendazole significantly reduced CBS disease severity on fruit that were asymptomatic at harvest, but did not affect disease incidence. These fungicides were not effective on fruit harvested later in the season (April), possibly because most lesion expression had already occurred before harvest, with little left to develop after harvest. On fruit showing CBS symptoms at harvest, postharvest fungicide treatments did not significantly affect disease incidence or severity after storage. Heating the fungicide solutions did not significantly improve fungicide effectiveness. These results demonstrated that fungicide azoxystrobin, imazalil, or thiabendazole could reduce CBS severity, but not incidence, on orange fruit that are still asymptomatic at harvest.
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收藏
页码:208 / 213
页数:6
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