Abstract

SUMMARYApple leaves collected at East Mailing and bearing colonies of Venturia inaequalis were exposed outdoors from November 1978 to May 1979 at 12 United Kingdom sites. Pseudothecial development and abundance were recorded from samples returned to East Mailing every 2 wk. Pseudothecia matured most rapidly with high rainfall in November and high temperatures in spring. Mature pseudothecia were most abundant with low temperatures in November and low rainfall in spring. In 1979‐80 a cross‐over experiment, in which scabbed leaves spent either November‐January or February‐April at a common site, and the other half of the winter at one of five sites, demonstrated the separate effects of weather following leaf‐fall and in the spring. Equations for forecasting the time to pseudothecial maturity, but not the numbers of mature pseudothecia, were obtained.Experiments in controlled environments demonstrated the importance of low temperature and high moisture for initiation and early development of pseudothecia, but a controlled increase of temperature in the spring did not result in faster rates of maturation compared with lower temperatures outdoors. Ascospore production from leaves kept in controlled environments in spring was consistently lower than from leaves kept outside.

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