Abstract

Crop diseases may be affected by landscape composition, but limited quantitative information is available. We studied the effects of landscape factors on the incidence of the psyllid-transmitted bacterium Candidatus Liberibacter solanacearum (CLso) haplotype C in carrots in Finland. Samples were collected from 104 carrot fields in 2013 and 2014. The relationship between CLso incidence and landscape data was analysed using logistic regression. The probability of CLso infection significantly increased with increasing area of carrot cultivation, up to a 10 km radius. Spruce biomass (spruce is the winter shelter of the main vector, Trioza apicalis,) within 200 m distance from the field edges affected CLso infection in landscapes with a low to medium area proportion of carrot cultivation but not in landscapes with a high proportion of carrot fields. Disease incidence was higher on clay soils than on mineral soils. The findings illustrate the importance of movement of the vector between carrot and spruce and highlight this disease as a landscape-scale disease syndrome, which needs to be managed also at the landscape level. Moderating the proportion of carrot fields in a carrot production landscape could be a key to manage the disease by breaking the epidemic cycle at the landscape level.

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