SUMMARYA laboratory test was developed to assess the sensitivity of field populations of Phytophthora infestans to metalaxyl. Discs of potato leaf tissue were floated upon solutions of the fungicide at different concentrations and inoculated with spores. The extent of symptom development was noted after incubation under standard conditions for 5–6 days. In preliminary experiments growth of isolates of P. infestans obtained from culture collections was severely inhibited in discs treated at 2 μg/ml. By contrast the development of an isolate obtained from a crop in Eire in which blight control with metalaxyl had failed, and known to be markedly less sensitive in vitro, was unaffected in discs treated at 100 μg/ml.During the summer of 1980, 234 samples of P. infestans were obtained from 20 sites in south‐west England, 10 of which had received sprays containing metalaxyl and 10 of which had not. All samples were sensitive to metalaxyl applied at 2 μg/ml. In 1981, 35 sites within the same area, 30 of which had received sprays containing either metalaxyl or ofurace (a related fungicide), were similarly surveyed. Most of the 79 samples of P. infestans examined proved sensitive and at all sites the amount of blight was small. However, at three sites, including one not treated with acylalanine fungicides, strains were found which were unaffected by 100 μg/ml metalaxyl in leaf disc tests. These findings are discussed in relation to the development of resistant blight in other areas and to the use of fungicide mixtures.
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