
Disease Incidence—Inoculum Dose Relationships forBotrytis cinereaandPenicillium expansumand Decay of Pear Fruit Using Dry, Airborne Conidia
Author(s) -
R. A. Spotts,
Louis A. Cervantes
Publication year - 2001
Publication title -
plant disease
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.663
H-Index - 108
eISSN - 1943-7692
pISSN - 0191-2917
DOI - 10.1094/pdis.2001.85.7.755
Subject(s) - penicillium expansum , botrytis cinerea , conidium , biology , inoculation , spore , horticulture , pear , blue mold , penicillium , botrytis , botany , postharvest
The objective of this research was to determine quantitative relationships between incidence of pear fruit decay and inoculum dose of Botrytis cinerea and Penicillium expansum using dry conidia applied to wet or dry pears in a settling tower. On wet fruit, incidence of gray mold fruit rot increased from 0.1 to 83.1% as the airborne concentration of B. cinerea conidia increased from 0 to 8.6 spores per liter of air. Significantly less decay occurred in fruit inoculated dry compared to wet, particularly in fruit wounded after inoculation. Incidence of blue mold increased from 1 to 100% as the airborne concentration of P. expansum conidia increased from 0.1 to 803.5 spores per liter of air. Blue mold incidence was not affected by fruit wetness or time of wounding relative to inoculation. All regressions of decay incidence versus airborne and surface conidial concentrations were highly significant (P = 0.01).