The role of wounds in the infection of oranges by Penicillium digitatum Sacc

Abstract
SUMMARY: Inocula of spores of Penicillium digitatum in water applied to apparently uninjured skin of oranges do not cause lesions to develop. Addition of citric acid, orange juice, or various extracts of rind had little effect on susceptibility to infection.When spores in water are applied to wounds made between oil vesicles, lesions develop only from wounds that penetrate deeply into the albedo. The flavedo of most oranges seems to be resistant to infection even when damaged, but in a few consignments it showed much less resistance. Increasing the number of conidia in the inoculum caused more lesions to develop but some fruits developed lesions from inocula containing very few spores. The method and timing of spore application to wounds had a considerable effect on the incidence of lesions; emanations from infected fruit had no effect.Lesions developed more rapidly and readily when suspensions of spores in water were applied to wounds in the skin that damaged oil vesicles; wounds as shallow as 0–25 mm allowed lesions to develop.

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