Secondary leaf fall of Hevea brasiliensis: meteorological and other factors affecting infection by Colletotrichum gloeosporioides
- 1 December 1972
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Annals of Applied Biology
- Vol. 72 (3) , 283-293
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1744-7348.1972.tb01295.x
Abstract
SUMMARY: The lower leaf surface of Hevea brasiliensis was more susceptible to infection by Colletotrichum gloeosporioides than the upper. Few lesions were produced if spore drops on susceptible leaves were allowed to dry. Lesion development after 72 h was quickest at 21 oC, slower at 26.5 oC and was stopped at 32 oC, probably because of bacteria in the inoculation drop. On leaflets aged 7 days from bud‐burst, the effective spore dose for 50% of leaflets infected (ED50) after 16 h incubation, was 260 spores and after 46 h, 120 spores/infection droplet; the minimum ED50 for the upper leaf surface was about 4 spores/mm2. Leaflets 15 days old, which are normally resistant, were rendered susceptible by abrading the surface with carborundum powder.Spores caught in a Hirst spore trap reached a daily maximum at 23 h, at rates of up to 440 spores/m3 air/h, but fell to low concentrations as the humidity dropped during the daytime, and also during rain. There was some correlation between disease severity and duration of 97–100% relative humidity, and moderate to severe defoliation of clone PB 86 occurred when this reached 13.5 h/day. Rainfall increases infection by prolonging the period of atmospheric saturation and leaf wetness.Keywords
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