Urediniospore production by Puccinia striiformis on wheat per unit leaf area infected was much lower at low light intensities than at high light intensities. The number of pustules per unit area of infected leaf and the daily sporulation rate per pustule increased linearly with increasing light over the range 10–50 W/m2. Increasing temperature between 7 and 20°C shortened latent period and reduced the longevity of sporulating leaves. Colonization rate and the frequency of pustules per unit area of infected leaf increased between 7 and 15°C but declined markedly at 20°C. Spore production reached its peak earlier and declined more rapidly with increasing temperature between 7 and 15°C. this decline being less marked in the highly susceptible cultivar Maris Beacon than in the more resistant Maris Nimrod and Maris Huntsman.
The tents of different ant species collected from young cocoa trees in their first or second year of bearing and free from visible pod rot, were tested for the presence of Phytopthtora palmivora by inoculating wounded cocoa pods with tent material. Tents of all species harboured viable P. palmivora but those consisting mainly of soil were more frequently positive than plant debris-type tents. Although Anoplolepis longipes, a dominant, ground nesting, non-tent building species sometimes transported inocula in the laboratory, it did not significantly increase black pod infection in the field. Trees infested with the dominant debris tent building species, Technomyrmex albipes, however, had significantly more black pod than those infested with A. longipes or trees without ants. A. longipes forms dense populations and can exclude other dominant ants and some cocoa pests; its introduction may be a potentially economical method of reducing the transmission of P. palmivora in redeveloped cocoa in Papua New Guinea.
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