Abstract
SUMMARY: A late blight epidemic studied at Toluca, Mexico, in 1962 may have started from stems infected at soil level by soil‐borne Phytophthora infestans. Its severity was demonstrated by the large differences in the rate foliage was destroyed and in yield of tubers between fungicide‐sprayed and unsprayed susceptible and resistant cultivars. The foliage resistances of some Mexican and European cultivars were compared using conventional blight keys and recording the destruction of marked leaves. Cultivars reacted in four ways: (1) Up‐to‐Date and Alpha leaves were infected and killed soon after plants emerged; (2) Bertita, Conchita and Florita abscissed many infected lower‐canopy leaves, and many infections on upper leaves aborted; (3) Elenita leaves had a few lesions in which the fungus grew slowly but remained alive; (4) Greta showed no infection until the potato plants met between rows but then infections developed rapidly and the foliage soon died. Mexican cultivars, except for Elenita, had few blighted tubers; susceptible European cultivars were killed before many tubers formed.Most spores were released during the morning, as in Europe, and leaf infection seemed associated with days with rain when much of the night remained humid. Cool nights lengthened incubation and generation times.

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