Abstract

Bud rot is a limiting disease that affects most oil palm crops destroying thousands of hectares in Latin America. Bud rot (BR) is caused by the oomycete Phytophthora palmivora (Butler). Integrated disease management (IDM) technology has been used to control the disease, which slows down the progress of the disease, allowing palm recovery. However, the effect of this technology on the recovery speed of treated palms is not well known. We studied the time taken for palm recovery from BR under the integrated management approach. The study was carried out on 21 oil palm commercial cultivars dura × pisifera (D × P) and O × G hybrids affected by BR in the Colombian oil palm Central Zone. The analysis included different recovery times (RT), the severity degree, time of the year (wet or dry season), number of reinfections, and cultivar. The RT of bud rot-affected palms ranges from 103 to 315 days, with an average of 202.8 days when an IDM is used. RT was lower than that reported in the diseased palms without IDM (540 days). According to the severity degree, the RT lasted 202 days for severity degree 1, 198 days for severity degree 2, and 222 with severity degree 3 and 4. In comparison, there was no significant difference between dry and rainy seasons in RT. Differences between cultivars were found; however, under IDM, all cultivars showed low RT. The IDM has a positive impact in reducing the RT to BR. Low RT has indirect effects minimizing potential yield losses, improving the number of successfully recovered palms, and reducing the risk of disease dissemination.

Highlights

  • Bud rot (BR) is a disease that affects oil palms in several countries [1], and it is one of the most devastating diseases for the crop [2]

  • The implementation of integrated disease management (IDM) on plants affected by BR positively impacted the reduction of recovery times (RT) with an average of 203 days from the time the disease was identified to the time the palms recovered

  • All cultivars evaluated in this study summarize the genetic basis of the commercial oil palm (E. guineensis, DxP) cultivars planted around the world [1]

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Bud rot (BR) is a disease that affects oil palms in several countries [1], and it is one of the most devastating diseases for the crop [2]. The disease has affected oil palm plantations in Congo [3], Suriname [4], Ecuador [5], Brazil [6], and different countries of Central. It has economic importance in some countries of Latin America due to large areas vanished by the disease. In Colombia, it was first reported in “The Arenosa”. Colombia has four oil palm regions; BR disease is present in all of them. In the Colombian Eastern Plains (CEP), oil palms affected by BR may recover spontaneously [10]

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call