Abstract

The pre-planting seed tuber treatments of chlorine dioxide (ClO 2), thiophanate-methyl (TPM), and a combination treatment of ClO 2, followed by TPM, were evaluated for control of stem canker and black scurf ( Rhizoctonia solani), and storage rots; black scurf, common scab ( Streptomyces scabies), dry rot ( Fusarium spp.) and silver scurf ( Helminthosporium solani) on potato ( Solanum tuberosum L.) cv. Kennebec. Field experiments were conducted in two consecutive years, 1999 and 2000, at the Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada Research Farm in Harrington, Prince Edward Island (PEI), Canada. The combination treatment of ClO 2 (200 μg g −1) and TPM (50 g active ingredient100 kg −1 of tubers) significantly ( P = 0.05 ) reduced stem canker and black scurf on progeny tubers at harvest and after storage. The low incidence of scab and dry rot in untreated controls hindered the evaluation of the efficacy of the combination treatment and also showed that conditions were not favourable for disease development during this period at Harrington. The combination treatment was not effective on silver scurf in storage. A comparison among control, ClO 2, TPM, and the combination treatment indicates that pre-planting ClO 2 treatment may have killed the majority of the black scurf sclerotia on the tuber surface and that the combination of TPM fungicide treatment following ClO 2 treatment gave protection to progeny tuber by suppressing the growth of the R. solani. A higher marketable yield was observed in the combination treatment as compared with the untreated control. Phytotoxicity was not observed in tubers treated with the combination treatment.

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