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Climatic factors influencing spore production in Alternaria brassicae and Alternaria brassicicola
Author(s) -
HUMPHERSONJONES F. M.,
PHELPS KATHLEEN
Publication year - 1989
Publication title -
annals of applied biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.677
H-Index - 80
eISSN - 1744-7348
pISSN - 0003-4746
DOI - 10.1111/j.1744-7348.1989.tb03360.x
Subject(s) - spore , alternaria brassicicola , biology , alternaria brassicae , horticulture , botany , host (biology) , alternaria , ecology , biochemistry , arabidopsis , mutant , gene
Summary Sporulation in A. brassicae and A. brassicicola on naturally‐infected leaf discs of oilseed rape and cabbage required humidities equal to or higher than 91.5% and 87% r.h. respectively. The optimum temperatures for sporulation were 18–24°C for A. brassicae and 20–30°C for A. brassicicola at which temperatures both fungi produced spores in 12–14 h. Above 24°C sporulation in A. brassicae was inhibited. At sub‐optimal temperatures sporulation times for A. brassicicola were significantly longer than for A. brassicae with the differences increasing with decrease in temperature. Interrupting a 16‐h wet period at 20°C with a period of 2 h at 70% or 80% r.h. did not affect sporulation in either fungus but a dry interruption of 3–4 h inhibited sporulation in both. Exposure of both fungi to alternating wet (18 h at 100% r.h., 20°C) and dry periods (6 or 30 h at 5565% r.h., 20°C) did not affect the concentration of spores produced in each wet period. Sporulation times were not affected by either the host type of the age of the host tissue. White light (136 W/m 2 ) inhibited sporulation in A. brassicae with the degree of inhibition increasing with increasing light intensity. The effect of light on sporulation in A. brassicicola was not tested.