1 / 20

Physalospora vaccinii Endophyte, commensal, inquiline, or incidental pathogen?

Physalospora vaccinii Endophyte, commensal, inquiline, or incidental pathogen?. OUDEMANS, P.V., C. Constantelos, F.V. Caruso, and P.S. McManus 1 Rutgers University, Chatsworth, NJ, U.S.A., 2 Retired; 3 University of Wisconsin. Cranberry Fruit Rot. Physalospora vaccinii.

skylar
Télécharger la présentation

Physalospora vaccinii Endophyte, commensal, inquiline, or incidental pathogen?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Physalospora vacciniiEndophyte, commensal, inquiline, or incidental pathogen? OUDEMANS, P.V., C. Constantelos, F.V. Caruso, and P.S. McManus1Rutgers University, Chatsworth, NJ, U.S.A., 2Retired; 3University of Wisconsin

  2. Cranberry Fruit Rot

  3. Physalosporavaccinii

  4. Location of P. vacciniion the Cranberry

  5. Cranberry Infection

  6. Inquilinism is the use of a second species as a platform or cavity for the living circumstance of the beneficiary species.

  7. Spore Trapping

  8. Pattern of Spore Release in Relation to Bloom Stages

  9. Pattern of Spore Release in Relation to Bloom Stages

  10. Pattern of Spore Release in Relation to Bloom Stages

  11. Pattern of spore release in relation to bloom stages

  12. Comparison Spore Release in Massachusetts and New Jersey 2009

  13. Incidental pathogen is an organism with the propensity to be a pathogen under certain climatic or growing conditions.

  14. Occurrence of Physalospora In other States NJ DE MA WI

  15. Effect of Fungicide Regimes on Appressorium Counts - NJ Results taken in June (left) and October (right) 2009 showing the effect of fungicide treatments on appressorium counts from different treatments. There appears to be no effect of fungicide use for fruit rot on the appressoria infection rate

  16. A comparison of different treatment regimes on leaf infection Appresoria per leaf (postharvest) Current season only Fruit rot (at harvest)

  17. Effect of Cultivar on Appressorium Counts - NJ Results taken in June and October 2009 showing the effect of variety on appressorium counts from Bog 3 NJ. There appears to be a small effect of variety on the appressoria infection rate

  18. Effect of Cultivar on Appressorium Counts - MA Results taken in June (left) and November (right) 2009 showing the effect of variety on appressorium counts from State Bog, UMass. There appears to be no effect of variety on the appressoria infection rate. However, the November sample is more in line with the NJ data

  19. Conclusions • P. vacciniiexhibits a 2-yr life cycle. • The fungus is widespread • Leaf infection is essential for survival • Fruit infection seems incidental

  20. Conclusions (continued) • Outbreaks should be predictable • Fungicide timing targets fruit infection • Fungicide resistance is unlikely

More Related