Abstract

In a two-year-study, the temporal development of brown rot (Monilinia fructigena) on fruits was analysed in an organic apple orchard on an early (Prima) and one late (Idared) maturing cultivars at Debrecen-Józsa in Hungary. Out of five mathematical functions (linear, exponential, three-parameter logistic, Gompertz, Bertalanffy-Mitscherlich), the three-parameter logistic function gave the best fit to brown rot incidence of all cultivars in both years. Disease progress started at the end of June for cv. Prima and at the end of July for cv. Idared, then disease increased continuously from 6-8 weeks up to harvest in all cultivars. Descriptive disease variates derived from the three-parameter logistic function were used to analyse disease progress. These were: Yf, the final disease incidence; Y55, fruit incidence at day 55; Y95, fruit incidence at day 95; b and q, the relative and the absolute rate of disease progress, respectively; T1.5, the time when disease incidence reaches 1.5 %; M, the inflection point and AUDPC, area under disease progress curve. Descriptive disease variates were significantly different (P<0.05) for cv. Prima compared to cv. Idared, except for the relative and absolute rate of disease increase, b and q, respectively. The largest differences among cultivars were in the values of the AUDPC. Disease progress curves and descriptive disease variates were presented and the practical implications of the results were discussed.

Highlights

  • Monilinia fructigena (Aderh. & Ruhl.) Honey is an important pathogen causing pre- and post-harvest fruit rot in apple orchards

  • In a similar study made in the UK, final brown rot incidence on apple fruits was ranging from 1 to 11 % on cv

  • The study was made in an organic apple orchard at Mándok, Hungary

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Summary

Introduction

Monilinia fructigena (Aderh. & Ruhl.) Honey is an important pathogen causing pre- and post-harvest fruit rot in apple orchards. & Ruhl.) Honey is an important pathogen causing pre- and post-harvest fruit rot in apple orchards. Losses caused by M. fructigena are usually low in well-treated conventional and integrated apple orchards (Moore, 1950; Byrde and Willetts, 1977; Berrie, 1989; Falconi & Mendgen, 1994; van Leeuwen et al, 2000; Xu & Robinson, 2000). In a seven-year study, Berrie (1989) reported mean post-harvest losses in cultivar (cv.) Cox’s Orange Pippin that ranged from 0.1% to 0.6% in integrated apple orchards. Post-harvest yield loss amounted on average 1.5-2.0 % for both cultivars. ). Cox’s Orange Pippin in an integrated orchard without fungicide treatment (Xu et al, 2001). Considerable yield loss was reported in unsprayed and poorly sprayed apple orchards. Burchill & Edney (1972) assessed 36 %

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