Spore dispersal patterns of Colletotrichum fioriniae in orchards and the timing of apple bitter rot infection periods

Bitter rot is a major disease of apple fruit in warm and humid regions. It is caused by various species in the Colletotrichum gloeosporioides and C. acutatum species complexes, of which C. fioriniae of the C. acutatum species complex is most common in the Mid-Atlantic region of the United States. Wh...

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Published inPlant disease
Main Authors Martin, Phillip L, Peter, Kari
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 01.08.2023
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Abstract Bitter rot is a major disease of apple fruit in warm and humid regions. It is caused by various species in the Colletotrichum gloeosporioides and C. acutatum species complexes, of which C. fioriniae of the C. acutatum species complex is most common in the Mid-Atlantic region of the United States. While bitter rot management begins with good cultural practices, fungicides are generally used for consistent control. Fungicides should be applied before or during infection periods, but the timing of infection is unclear due to the hemibiotrophic lifestyle of the causal species. To determine when infection periods occur, we quantified C. fioriniae spore dispersal throughout three growing seasons and compared the temporal susceptibility of apples in two seasons of field trials. Spores were detected in rainwater from bud break to leaf drop, with the highest spore quantities in the summer and early fall correlating with optimal temperatures for C. fioriniae. Late-season-inoculated fruit had more bitter rot than early-season-inoculated fruit, but this was also positively correlated with periods of optimal temperatures and moisture for infection. In the context of previous experiments, these results suggest that infection periods are primarily determined by temperature and moisture rather than apple fruit phenology. Based on the relative numbers of spores, biotrophic and necrotrophic infections, only a tiny proportion of spores establish viable biotrophic infections, but a relatively high proportion of biotrophic infections switch to necrotrophy. We suggest bitter rot management should focus on preventing initial biotrophic infections by protecting apples during weather conditions that favor infection.
AbstractList Bitter rot is a major disease of apple fruit in warm and humid regions. It is caused by various species in the Colletotrichum gloeosporioides and C. acutatum species complexes, of which C. fioriniae of the C. acutatum species complex is most common in the Mid-Atlantic region of the United States. While bitter rot management begins with good cultural practices, fungicides are generally used for consistent control. Fungicides should be applied before or during infection periods, but the timing of infection is unclear due to the hemibiotrophic lifestyle of the causal species. To determine when infection periods occur, we quantified C. fioriniae spore dispersal throughout three growing seasons and compared the temporal susceptibility of apples in two seasons of field trials. Spores were detected in rainwater from bud break to leaf drop, with the highest spore quantities in the summer and early fall correlating with optimal temperatures for C. fioriniae. Late-season-inoculated fruit had more bitter rot than early-season-inoculated fruit, but this was also positively correlated with periods of optimal temperatures and moisture for infection. In the context of previous experiments, these results suggest that infection periods are primarily determined by temperature and moisture rather than apple fruit phenology. Based on the relative numbers of spores, biotrophic and necrotrophic infections, only a tiny proportion of spores establish viable biotrophic infections, but a relatively high proportion of biotrophic infections switch to necrotrophy. We suggest bitter rot management should focus on preventing initial biotrophic infections by protecting apples during weather conditions that favor infection.
Author Peter, Kari
Martin, Phillip L
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  givenname: Phillip L
  surname: Martin
  fullname: Martin, Phillip L
  email: phillip@labservices.com
  organization: United States; phillip@labservices.com
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  givenname: Kari
  surname: Peter
  fullname: Peter, Kari
  email: kap22@psu.edu
  organization: Penn State Fruit Research & Ext Ctr, 290 University Dr., P.O. Box 330, Biglerville, Pennsylvania, United States, 17307; kap22@psu.edu
BackLink https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36723956$$D View this record in MEDLINE/PubMed
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Keywords Fungi
Trees
disease development and spread
forest
cultural and biological practices
Fruit
Crop Type
Causal Agent
Disease management
Epidemiology
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tree fruits
Language English
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Snippet Bitter rot is a major disease of apple fruit in warm and humid regions. It is caused by various species in the Colletotrichum gloeosporioides and C. acutatum...
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Title Spore dispersal patterns of Colletotrichum fioriniae in orchards and the timing of apple bitter rot infection periods
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