Abstract

Sunlight is known to reduce the incidence of blister blight disease of tea, caused by Exobasidium vexans. The effects of the ultraviolet‐B (UV‐B: 290–320 nm) component of solar radiation on the disease and the development of E. vexans were studied in the field in Sri Lanka using UV‐screening filter materials held over a commercial crop. Exclusion of UV‐B radiation by Polyester, which reduces fluxes in the UV‐B region by approximately 75–85%, increased both the number of translucent spots (immature sites of infection) and number of sporulating blisters (mature sites of infection), but it had little or no effect on the sporulation of the pathogen. When basidiospores were artificially inoculated on leaves, and were exposed to full or filtered solar radiation, their survival and germination increased when UV‐B wavelengths were removed; significant differences were found 62 h after inoculation. However, UV‐B did not affect the extension of germ tubes. This study indicates that the UV‐B component of solar radiation plays an important role in the natural regulation of blister blight disease in the field.

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