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1.
Plant Dis ; 2024 Mar 28.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38549270

RESUMO

Pecan (Carya illinoinensis) is a valuable crop in the southern United States. Scab (caused by Venturia effusa) is a major biotic constraint to pecan production in the southeastern region and requires 10 to 15 or more fungicide applications for control. Spray application relies on large standard radial airflow air-blast sprayers (SS). Some SS have been adapted to include a volute on one side to project spray higher into the canopy due to a decline in coverage with height. Recently, a grower-designed and engineered double-volute-generated focused airflow air-blast sprayer (DVS) was assessed for scab control and spray coverage compared to an SS. Over three seasons, on foliage and fruit, scab control was either equal too, or superior using the DVS sprayer. On mature fruit, in 2017, scab severity on the control was 9.07%, on the DVS was 0.19%, and on the SS was 0.24%, respectively; in 2018 severity was 84.4%, 18.4% and 29.1%, respectively; and in 2019 was 32.7%, 7.0% and 11.6%, respectively. There were no discernable gradients in scab severity with trees height with either sprayer in 2017, but in 2018 the difference was significant, with the DVS having a shallower gradient, and in 2019 the DVS slope was numerically less steep compared to the SS. Mature fruit weight was significantly greater on trees treated using the DVS compared to the SS in 2017 and 2018 but was not different in 2019. Spray coverage studies showed that the DVS sprayer had significantly more coverage at heights >13.8 m (up to 19.0 m), ranging from 18.4% to 14.1%, compared to coverage using the SS, which ranged from 7.9% to 2.9%. The slope in decline of spray coverage with height was significantly shallower with the DVS sprayer, and spray profiles reflected these differences. Disease control was improved overall when using the DVS, and the DVS provided greater spray coverage at heights >13.8 m when compared to the SS sprayer. The DVS design may offer economical, superior scab control in pecan orchards where trees are >13.8 m tall.

2.
Plant Dis ; 104(7): 2014-2022, 2020 Jul.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32484420

RESUMO

Peach scab, caused by Venturia carpophila, is a damaging disease of peach in the southeastern United States. Thus, fungicides are applied to reduce peach scab. Tractor speed was investigated as a variable affecting spray deposition and disease control in relation to volume applied. In experiments in 2015 and 2016, trees were sprayed with fungicide to control scab at petal fall to 1% shuck split and at shuck split to 10% shuck off. Speeds were 3.2, 4.8, and 6.4 kph resulting in 1,403, 935, and 701 liters/ha, respectively, with the dose of active ingredient (a.i.) per ha kept constant. Deposition declined for all speeds with later spray dates. There was a negative linear relationship between tractor speed and spray coverage on three of four dates the experiment was repeated. Tractor speed (different volumes, equal doses) affected peach scab. In 2015 and 2016, mean incidence at 3.2, 4.8, and 6.4 kph was 68.6, 59.2, and 38.3%, and 64.2, 53.0, and 40.4% of fruit scabbed, respectively. Effect of speed on lesion number per fruit depended on year: in 2015, lesions per fruit were reduced at 6.4 kph compared with 3.2 and 4.8 kph but were not different in 2016. Control trees had fewer lesions per fruit high in the canopy, but there was little effect of sample height in fungicide-treated trees. Concentration of a.i. in lower volumes applied at higher speed may provide some benefit in reducing incidence of peach scab, but there appeared to be less effect on severity.


Assuntos
Ascomicetos , Fungicidas Industriais , Prunus persica , Incidência , Sudeste dos Estados Unidos
3.
Plant Dis ; 97(5): 626-634, 2013 May.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30722208

RESUMO

Pecan scab (Fusicladium effusum) is a destructive disease of pecan in the southeastern United States. This study was conducted to investigate the vertical distribution of scab in tall pecan trees (14 to 16 m tall) in three experiments in 2010 and 2011. Although 2010 had average rainfall, a factor that drives scab epidemics, 2011 was a very dry year with a consequently low scab severity. A total of eight trees were included in each experiment, four were nontreated controls, and four were sprayed using a ground-based air-blast sprayer. Trees were assessed for foliar and fruit scab at 0-5.0, 5.0+-7.5, 7.5+-10.0, 10.0+-12.5, and 12.5+-15.0 m. Mixed model analysis showed main effects of height, fungicide treatment, and height*treatment interactions in all three experiments, although on foliage the effects were less consistent (P value = 0.003-0.8), perhaps due to delayed fungicide applications early in the season. However, fruit of nontreated trees had more severe scab low in the canopy compared to fungicide-treated trees, with a consistent height*treatment interaction (P value = <0.0001-0.04). Most often the severity of scab in the upper canopy was similar in trees on fungicide-treated and nontreated trees, suggesting that fungicide had less impact at heights ≥10.0 m compared to <10.0 m in the canopy. There was a consistent reduction in scab severity on foliage and on immature fruit in August due to fungicide treatment at heights ≤10.0 m. Above 10.0 m, the effect was inconsistent, but late in the season (October), the fungicide-treated trees showed lower scab severity throughout the canopy. A metallic tracer study using cerium (Ce) showed an exponential relationship between quantities of Ce recovered and sample height in the canopy, with the quantity of Ce at ≥10 m being statistically equal to background levels. The relationship between scab severity on fruit and sample height in the canopy of nontreated trees was most often described by a negative linear function, but there was no discernible relationship on fungicide-treated trees, as the severity of scab in the lower canopy was most often similar to that in the upper canopy. Gradients in fungicide coverage and scab severity have ramifications for scab management options and potentially for the development of fungicide resistance in F. effusum.

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