by B. cinerea at harvest but reduced latent infection in strawberry.(2) Models developed for strawberry crops grown in the open did not give reliable predictions of flower infections on both strawberry and raspberry grown under protection. It was not possible to develop a predictive model for flower infection on raspberry grown under protection. (3) The level of ripe fruit with visual symptoms at harvest was low, usually close to zero. (4) Nearly all fruits from both sprayed and unsprayed crops were colonised by several fungi, including B. cinerea, within 7 days of harvest when stored at room temperatures. Based on these results, we question the value of scheduled fungicide applications to flowers and fruit for grey mould control under protection, and suggest that post-harvest fruit management, e.g. rapid cooling, is the key to prevent fruit from developing fungal rots before consumption.
Cylindrocladium buxicola causes a damaging blight disease on boxwood which has spread rapidly throughout Europe since introduction of the pathogen in England in the mid 1990s. The pathogen has also been recently identified in the USA and British Columbia. The disease is difficult to control using cultural methods and information about chemical control is lacking. To address this, preventative and curative foliar fungicide sprays previously shown in laboratory tests to have efficacy were evaluated over two autumn/winter seasons in the UK. Results from the first autumn/winter season showed that the premix product Opponent (epoxiconazole + kresoxim-methyl + pyraclostrobin) was the best treatment when applied preventatively 3 days before inoculation. In the second autumn/winter season, curative treatment of diseased plants was best achieved with a weekly program of fungicides starting 3 days before inoculation and alternating with two or three products including Bravo (chlorothalonil), Signum (boscalid + pyraclostrobin), and Octave (prochloraz). The only fungicide tested and available to amateur growers in the UK, Fungus Clear (penconazole), was found to give moderate control of boxwood blight. Accepted for publication 7 August 2012. Published 24 October 2013.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.