scholarly journals Testing of laboratory samples of microbiological preparations based on promising producer strains for the control of apple scab

2021 ◽  
Vol 34 ◽  
pp. 04007
Author(s):  
Lyubov Maslienko ◽  
Galina Yakuba

To prevent phytosanitary destabilization in apple agrocenoses, it is necessary to include ecologically safe microbiological preparations in the protection systems. In the Krasnodar region in 2016 and 2019 in the field, laboratory samples of microbiological preparations were tested in the formulation “wettable powder” from the collection of the laboratory of the biological method of the FGBNU VNIIMK against Venturia inaequalis (Cooke) G. Winter. Of the 9 laboratory samples tested in 2016, the highest efficiency, approaching the effectiveness of a chemical fungicide, was shown by samples based on fungal producer strains: RK-1, XK-1 and T-2 - 76.9-92.5%. In 2019, all variants (in the amount of 4) using laboratory samples of microbiological preparations were more effective in comparison with the active substance of chemical origin. The best scab control was provided by a laboratory sample of a three-component mixed preparation based on two fungal and one bacterial producer strain RK-1 + XK-1 + B-12 - 83.0-84.9%. The isolated samples are promising for research on the creation of microbiological preparations against apple scab.

2005 ◽  
Vol 71 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-8 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Warner

Several sterol-biosynthesis-inhibiting (SBI) fungicides were tested alone and in combination with a broad-spectrum protectant material in field trials for control of Venturia inaequalis. When used in a 10-day spray schedule, SBI fungicides, whether used alone or in a mixture, provided improved scab control as compared to the protectant material used alone. With bitertanol, diniconazole, and penconazole, the mixture also provided better scab control than when the SBI fungicide was used alone. However, with flusilazole and myclobutanil, no improvement in disease control occurred with the mixture as compared to the SBI fungicide alone. Fruit russeting was observed after a post-bloom application of hexaconazole and growth-regulating effects on the foliage were observed following cyproconazole and hexaconazole use. The use of SBI fungicides in mixtures to avoid or delay the development of fungus resistance is discussed.


2004 ◽  
Vol 57 ◽  
pp. 20-24 ◽  
Author(s):  
R.M Beresford ◽  
W.R. Henshall ◽  
J.W. Palmer

A new model has been developed for assessing daytoday variation in risk of infection of apples by Venturia inaequalis the scab or black spot pathogen The model comprises three components ascospore availability wetnessbased infection risk based on Mills periods and susceptible leaf area The ascospore and wetnessbased infection risk components were adapted from previous models whereas the susceptible leaf area component is new When the model used weather data from Hawkes Bay and Nelson in spring 2003 the predicted risk incidence was determined mostly by wetnessbased infection risk but the magnitude of risk periods was greatly influenced by predicted ascospore release The susceptible leaf area component predicted a hitherto unidentified increase in infection risk after the peak in ascospore maturation rate had occurred The model is intended to assist in fungicide selection and timing for scab control in New Zealand apples but needs to be field tested before implementation


Plant Disease ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 95 (8) ◽  
pp. 927-934 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kimberley E. Lesniak ◽  
Tyre J. Proffer ◽  
Janna L. Beckerman ◽  
George W. Sundin

Control strategies for Venturia inaequalis rely heavily on chemical fungicides. Single-site fungicides such as the quinone-outside inhibitors (QoI) have been used in Michigan apple orchards for more than 11 years. In 2008, we sampled eight commercial orchards in the Fruit Ridge growing region of Michigan in which apple scab control failures were observed on ‘McIntosh’ apple following applications of kresoxim-methyl or trifloxystrobin. QoI resistance was assessed in 210 total isolates (a total of 17 orchards) using a spore germination assay and in 319 isolates using a polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assay to detect the G143A mutation located within the V. inaequalis cytochrome b gene (CYTB). The G143A mutation is known to confer high-level QoI resistance in plant-pathogenic fungi. QoI resistance was confirmed in 50 and 64% of the isolates tested with the spore germination and PCR assays, respectively, and there was a 97% concordance observed between the assays. In 2009, we sampled and examined an additional 1,201 V. inaequalis isolates from 64 orchards in Michigan and 86 isolates from four baseline sites in Ohio. All of these isolates were assayed for the G143A mutation and it was detected within 67 and 0% of the Michigan and Ohio isolates, respectively. Our results indicate the widespread occurrence of QoI resistance in Michigan commercial orchard populations of V. inaequalis. Loss of QoI fungicides further limits the arsenal of fungicides available to commercial apple growers for successful scab management.


Plant Disease ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 99 (11) ◽  
pp. 1526-1536 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sara M. Villani ◽  
Alan R. Biggs ◽  
Daniel R. Cooley ◽  
Jessica J. Raes ◽  
Kerik D. Cox

Demethylation inhibitors (DMIs) are a class of single-site fungicides with high levels of protective and curative efficacy against Venturia inaequalis, the causal agent of apple scab. To determine the prevalence of resistance to the DMI fungicide myclobutanil, 3,987 single-lesion conidial V. inaequalis isolates from 141 commercial, research, and baseline orchard populations were examined throughout New England, the mid-Atlantic, and the Midwest from 2004 to 2013. Of these orchard populations, 63% had practical resistance, 13% had reduced sensitivity, and 24% were sensitive to myclobutanil. A sensitivity baseline for the recently introduced DMI fungicide difenoconazole was established to make comparisons with myclobutanil sensitivity in orchard populations. The mean effective concentration of difenoconazole at which mycelial growth was inhibited by 50% (EC50) was determined to be 0.002 μg ml−1 for 44 baseline isolates of V. inaequalis. From 2010 to 2013, 1,012 isolates of V. inaequalis from 37 of the 141 orchard populations above were screened for sensitivity to difenoconazole. In all, 1 orchard population had reduced sensitivity to difenoconazole, while the remaining 36 orchard populations were sensitive to the fungicide. In field experiments, difenoconazole demonstrated high levels of apple scab control on mature apple fruit, despite the fact that the population of V. inaequalis had practical resistance to difenoconazole. Although our results indicate widespread resistance to myclobutanil but not difenoconazole, due to the propensity for cross-sensitivity among DMI fungicides, growers with myclobutanil resistance should be cautious when using difenoconazole for disease management.


Plant Disease ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 100 (8) ◽  
pp. 1606-1616 ◽  
Author(s):  
Srđan G. Aćimović ◽  
Anthony H. VanWoerkom ◽  
Thomas Garavaglia ◽  
Christine Vandervoort ◽  
George W. Sundin ◽  
...  

To optimize the number and timing of trunk injections for season-long control of apple scab (Venturia inaequalis), we evaluated 1 to 2 and 4 seasonal and cross-seasonal injections of potassium phosphites and synthetic fungicides and quantified residues in leaves and fruit. Phosphites accumulated in the canopy at the highest concentrations, aligned well in time with scab suppression, and gave better leaf scab control of 41.8 to 73.5% than propiconazole (16.9 to 51.5%) or cyprodinil + difenoconazole (5.4 to 17.4%). More injections of phosphites controlled leaf scab better than fewer (23.7% versus 48.2%), and more fungicide injections resulted in 21.9 to 51.1% better leaf scab control than fewer. Leaf scab control with phosphites was only 3.2 to 13.9% better with 4 cross-seasonal compared with 4 seasonal injections, while 1 to 2 seasonal compared with 1 to 2 cross-seasonal injections improved scab control only for 4.2 to 22.1%. On shoots, injected phosphites provided comparable or for 4.4 to 10.5% and 22.3 to 41.4% better scab control than spray standards. On fruit, injected phosphites slightly improved control compared with sprayed phosphites or the sprayed fungicide standard (33.4 to 40.8%). Two seasonal injections of phosphites controlled shoot scab 5.7% better than 9 spray applications. Five sprays of cyprodinil + difenoconazole controlled scab better than their injections. Fruit residues of phosphites reached 2.8 ppm and declined in all treatments except in 2 seasonal injections and phosphite sprays. Cyprodinil and difenoconazole fruit residues reached 0.02 and 0.07 ppm and declined sharply toward the end of the season. These were far below the United States, Codex, and EU MRL-s of 1, 0.8, and 0.5 ppm for difenoconazole, and 1.7, 2, and 1 ppm for cyprodinil, respectively.


Plant Disease ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 99 (4) ◽  
pp. 535-543 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jürgen Köhl ◽  
Christian Scheer ◽  
Imre J. Holb ◽  
Sylwester Masny ◽  
Wilma Molhoek

Apple scab, caused by Venturia inaequalis, is the most important disease in apple production, reducing yield and quality of fruit. Control of apple scab in commercial orchards currently depends on multiple applications of fungicides. The potential of the antagonistic isolate Cladosporium cladosporioides H39, originating from a sporulating colony of V. inaequalis, to control apple scab development was tested in eight trials during 2 years in orchards in Eperjeske (Hungary), Dabrowice (Poland), and Bavendorf (Germany) planted with different cultivars. Treatments were conducted as calendar sprays or after infection periods. Additional trials in an orchard in Randwijk (The Netherlands) focused on the effect of timing of antagonist application before or after infection periods. The overall results of the field trials consistently showed—for the first time—that stand-alone applications of the antagonist C. cladosporioides H39 can reduce apple scab in leaves and fruit. This was demonstrated in an organic growing system as well as in conventional orchards by spray schedules applied during the primary or the summer season. In both systems, the same control levels could be reached as with common fungicide schedules. Efficacies reached 42 to 98% on leaf scab incidence and 41 to 94% on fruit scab. The antagonist was also effective if applied one or even several days (equivalent to approximately 300 to 2,000 degree h) after infection events in several field trials and a trial conducted in Randwijk with single-spray applications at different intervals before or after infection events. Better understanding of the biology of the antagonist will help to further exploit its use in apple scab control.


2006 ◽  
Vol 32 (2) ◽  
pp. 67-73
Author(s):  
Ryan Blaedow ◽  
William Chaney ◽  
Paul Pecknold ◽  
Harvey Holt

Paclobutrazol (PBZ) as a systemic fungicide for control of apple scab (Venturia inaequalis) was investigated in mature (cv. Hopa and Snow Drift) and young sapling (cv. Indian Magic) crabapples (Malus spp.). Treatments consisted of a control and PBZ applied to mature trees at one or two times the recommended rate in April 2002 using the basal drench method. Saplings received either foliar or soil drench applications of PBZ, or foliar applications of propiconazole. Disease assessments of mature trees showed that apple scab symptoms in treated trees were as severe as in untreated ones in the year of treatment but were reduced slightly the year after treatment in ‘Hopa’ and the third year after treatment in ‘Snow Drift.’ Growth reduction occurred in all treated trees, suggesting that the PBZ levels needed for growth reduction were not sufficient to control apple scab in the year of treatment. In contrast, a one-time foliar application of PBZ reduced apple scab incidence to levels found in ‘Indian Magic’ saplings treated every 2 weeks with propiconazole, a fungicide and application method commonly recommended for apple scab control. Delayed uptake and insufficient transport of PBZ to the foliage of mature trees after root drench treatments may account for the lack of apple scab control in the years after treatment, even though growth suppression occurred.


2014 ◽  
Vol 40 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Luke Hailey ◽  
Glynn Percival

Potassium phosphite is a widely used plant protection agent. However, a suite of phosphite formulations with alternative cation attachments (calcium, copper, silicon, zinc) are commercially available. The plant protective properties of these formulations have received little attention. This study evaluated five phosphite formulations for plant protection purposes against the foliar pathogen apple scab (Venturia inaequalis) under field conditions. In addition, a comparative analysis against the synthetic fungicide penconazole, which is widely used for apple scab control, was conducted. Greatest reductions in leaf and fruit scab severity were achieved by sprays of the synthetic fungicide penconazole. However, all phosphite formulations evaluated significantly reduced leaf and fruit scab severity at the cessation of the growing season. Within the phosphites tested, the greatest reductions in leaf and fruit scab severity were achieved in the order: copper phosphite > silicon phosphite > zinc phosphite > calcium phosphite > potassium phosphite > control. The advantages and disadvantages of these phosphite formulations for scab control are discussed.


Plant Disease ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 90 (3) ◽  
pp. 375-375 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. V. Sallato ◽  
B. A. Latorre ◽  
G. Aylwin

Resistance to the QoI fungicide (kresoxim-methyl) was detected in Venturia inaequalis (Cooke) Winter isolates from apple scab lesions collected from apple orchards in Chile after 5 to 6 years of commercial use of QoI fungicides. To reduce or prevent resistance development, QoI fungicides have been applied in blocks of two or three consecutive applications followed by an application of a fungicide with a different mode of action. However, the efficacy of kresoxim-methyl declined dramatically, providing almost no disease control in several orchards under high scab pressure in southern Chile, and resistance to the QoI fungicides was suspected. Conidia from at least five sporulating leaf scab lesions were collected from each of 10 and 14 orchards in 2003 and 2004, respectively. Fungicide sensitivity was determined by using a conidial germination test on potato dextrose agar acidified with 0.5 ml/liter of 95% lactic acid (APDA) containing kresoxim-methyl (Stroby 50 SC) at 0.0, 0.01, 0.1, and 1.0 μg/ml. The kresoxim-methyl concentration (0.01 μg/ml) has been used as a discriminatory dose in previous resistance studies (2). Germination was assessed for at least 100 conidia at each inhibitor concentration after 18 to 24 h of incubation at 20°C (1,2). Sensitivities were expressed as the percentage of germination relative to that on unamended APDA (1,2). These assays were repeated and all isolates with 50% effective dose (ED50) at >0.1 μg/ml were considered resistant. Isolates from eight of 10 and two of 14 orchards were resistant to kresoxim-methyl in 2003 and 2004, respectively. Relative germination varied from 42.4 to 100% for isolates from resistant orchards on 0.1 μg/ml of kresoxim-methyl, with eight isolates having ED50 at >0.1 μg/mL. Conidia from isolates obtained in 2003 also germinated on APDA amended with 1.0 μg/ml of kresoxim-methyl, with two isolates having ED50 at >1.0 μg/mL. Relative to the mean ED50 of 0.02 μg/ml of kresoxim-methyl determined for relative germination in North America baseline population of V. inaequalis (2), resistance factors for these Chilean isolates were estimated to range from 5 to 50. Conidia of resistant isolates continued to germinate in the presence of 0.1 μg/ml of kresoxim-methyl when 100 μg/ml of salicylhydroxamic acid was added to the amended APDA, suggesting that an alternative oxidase pathway was not responsible for the in vitro results obtained (2). A G143A target mutation has been detected in a V. inaequalis isolate from Chile, although no details concerning this finding were reported (Fungicide Resistance Action Committee, online publication, 2004 [ http://www.frac.info ]). The poor control of apple scab with QoI fungicides in Chilean orchards appears to be due to the development of resistant strains of V. inaequalis that occurred despite the limited use of these materials in blocks of two or three consecutive applications, as initially suggested for resistance management. Farmers have been advised to make only one application of QoI fungicide per year in a tank mixture with another type of fungicide or even to abandon the use of QoI fungicides for apple scab control. To our knowledge, this is the first report of a severe outbreak of apple scab due to the presence of populations of V. inaequalis resistant to QoI fungicides under commercial conditions in Chile. References: (1) R. B. Küng Färber et al. Pest Manage. Sci. 58:261, 2002. (2) G. Olaya and W. Köller. Plant Dis. 83:274, 1999.


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