Effect of low volume copper sprays with polyisobutene sticker on mango blossom blight(Glomerella cingulata)in Dominica
- 1 January 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Tropical Pest Management
- Vol. 33 (4) , 350-352
- https://doi.org/10.1080/09670878709371180
Abstract
Two spraying strategies to control mango blossom blight caused by Glomerella cingulata were tested in Dominica In one trial, a single dose of 4% copper oxychloride (18 g per tree) was applied to foliage before flowering had started, while the other trial compared fortnightly applications of concentrations up to 2%, starting after flowering. The early single dose gave a significant increase in fruit set, whereas the repeated doses gave no significant effects. Early application, followed by a low volume spraying of protectant fungicides, may reduce the cost of disease control. The addition of 0.5% polyisobutene sticker, tested in the single dose trial, gave a consistently improved fruit set compared to the non‐sticker treatment, significant at one recording date; the overall evidence was encouraging. In vitro tests showed that the fungus was less sensitive to copper than to chlorothalonil and some systemic fungicides.Keywords
This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- The epidemiology of anthracnose disease of mango: inoculum sources, spore production and dispersalAnnals of Applied Biology, 1984
- Resistance of Mango Pathogens to Fungicides Used to Control Postharvest DiseasesPlant Disease, 1982