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Pome fruits

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Most production is in the cooler ... Recently Granny Smith, Gala, Fiji ... Air currents (3-5 kilometers) germ tubes leaf and fruit of apples, temp and ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Pome fruits


1
Pome fruits
  • Grown in the temperate zones in both hemispheres.
    Most production is in the cooler sections of US,
    Canada and Europe. Not below Memphis and Fort
    Smith AR.
  • Apples 1 pome fruit with most production in the
    Pacific NW, in the valleys where climate is dry
    and the crops are irrigated.
  • 1991 9,871 million pounds
  • Leading States 71 of total production
  • Washington 4,300 million lbs
  • New York 1,050 million lbs
  • Michigan
  • Calif.
  • PA, VA, NC, WVA, OR, ID, OH, and IL

2
Most popular varieties
  • Red and Yellow Delicious
  • McIntosh
  • Rome Beauty
  • York
  • Jonathan
  • Recently Granny Smith, Gala, Fiji
  • Fresh market highest prices, remainder of crop
    is process for juice, sauce, jelly or jam.

3
Apple Diseases
  • Apple Scab
  • Fire Blight
  • Cedar Apple Rust
  • Black Rot

4
Apple Scab
  • Pathogen
  • Venturia inequalis sexual
  • Spilocaea pomi -asexual
  • Responsible for crop failures in the late 1800s.
    Present in all countries where apples are grown.
    Not a problem in dry, irrigated locations, but
    where cool moist wet spring months are common

5
James Peale, 1824
6
Symptoms
  • Fruit, leaves, leaf petioles, and young twigs
    attacked causing scabby lesions in which tissues
    may be killed.
  • Leaf - spots, black in color and appear on both
    surfaces and leaf may curl or distort
  • Fruit Scabs - appear similar on fruit but the
    fungus stimulates cork formation beneath spots
    that may cover the fruits and result in severe
    fruit disfiguration
  • Twigs infections easily overlooked as the
    lesions look like enlarged lenticels
  • Fungus attacks only current season growth

7
Symptoms
8
Symptoms
9
Signs
pseudothecia
10
Signs
11
(No Transcript)
12
Symptoms
13
Economic impact
  • Greater than most diseases because
  • Crop reduction (Defoliation- weakening)
  • Lowering of fruit grade
  • Foliage loss
  • Increase in production costs Fungicides Prior
    to fungicides, total fruit drop appeared
    dormant in June.

14
Disease Cycle
  • Fungus overwinters in leaves on ground and
    sometimes on apple buds
  • Late fall spring pseudothecia are produced in
    leaves Primary infection in new growth
  • Olive, two-celled ascospores Primary Inoc.
    Ejected into air
  • Conidia produced in apple bud scales
  • Ascospores and conidia infect flowers and leaves
  • Secondary cycle conidia produced in primary
    lesions, 7-9 days after infection
  • Spread by splashing rain and by wind.
  • Infected fruit may not show symptoms until
    storage after several months
  • Inoculum level in spring may be high after spray
    because overwintering in leaves

15
Disease Cycle Apple Scab
16
Control
  • Hosts Cultivated apple and crab apple species.
    Not to pear
  • Resistance
  • Sanitation not feasible
  • Chemical - 1, protectant prevent spores from
    germinating, postinfection fungicides some
    resistance in fungal populations

17
Cedar Apple Rust
  • Pathogen Gymnosporangiuim juniperi-virginianae
    Basidiomycete
  • Name comes from fact that red cedar (Juniperus
    viginianae) is alternate host
  • Other species cause quince rust and hawthorn rust
  • Economic impact due to apple tree defoliation
    that results in fruit yield and size reduction
    and also a reduction in tree vigor

18
Symptoms
  • Apple
  • Leaf - bright yellow leaf spots that turn orange
    as enlarge and age.
  • Fruit and twig infections occur
  • These symptoms caused by fungus aecial stage.
  • Cedar
  • Leaf - Brown to reddish brown leaf galls -During
    periods of rain, galls produce orange, gelatinous
    spore-horns from the gall surface that contain
    masses of teliospores.
  • Teliospores germinate and each cell produces 4
    basdiospores that are airborne to apples

19
Symptoms
20
Disease Cycle
  • Two host and three fruiting structures
  • Apple, cedar - telia, aecia, and pycnia
  • OW in reddish brown galls cedar apples in cedar
    tree
  • Wet in spring horns with teliospores, each
    produces 4 basidiospores
  • Air currents (3-5 kilometers) germ tubes leaf
    and fruit of apples, temp and wetting conditions
    4-8 d old leaves - spermagonia that is
    fertilized by compatible spermatia production
    of aecia
  • July and August windborne aeciospores (produced
    in chains) from apple infect cedar leaves 1-3
    weeks rust lesion
  • fungus grows in tissue in winter18 months after
    infection production of galls

21
Disease Cycle
22
Control
  • Eradication 1-2 miles of orchards red cedars,
    4-5 miles more effective
  • Resistance
  • Chemical

23
Fireblight
  • Pathogen Erwinia amylovora bacterium
  • This was the first plant disease proven to be
    caused by a bacterium
  • Pear industry in Eastern U.S. was essentially
    wiped out by this disease in 1900s
  • Pear is considerably more susceptible than apple,
    - most destructive disease of apple
  • Economic impact Results from killing of
    flowers, fruit spurs, twigs and girdling of large
    branches and trunks that results in death of the
    trees
  • Young trees in nursery or orchard can be
    killed in a single season.
  • Hosts over 75 rosaceous plant species are
    susceptible

24
Symptoms
  • Flower and twig blight appears in spring,
    blackening of flowers and leaves curled leaves
    hanging from twigs and small branches
  • Fruits first as watersoaked lesion, then
    mummifies and turn black and may be tree for
    several months
  • Fruit spurs and terminal twigs Infections and
    symptoms progress to supporting branches where
    cankers are formed.
  • Sign During humid conditions, milky bacterial
    ooze may appear on surface of infected part
    rod-shaped with flagella

25
Symptoms
Apple Shoot
Pear Blossom
26
Symptoms (Shepards Crook)
27
Symptoms
Burnt Appearance
Diseased shoot on left
28
Disease Cycle
  • Bacteria overwinter in canker margins in branches
  • Warm spring weather multiplication
  • Sticky bacterial exudates is present insects are
    attracted and pickup ooze on their bodies and
    transfer to flowers where new infections take
    place
  • Splashing rain may also spread the bacteria
    (enter through natural and wound openings)

29
Disease Cycle Fire Blight
30
Control
  • 3 Areas of Importance
  • I. Reducing bacterial inoculum
  • Removal by pruning the overwintering cankers
  • Weekly inspection of orchards in summer, and
    removal of infected spurs and terminals
  • Disinfect tools
  • II. Properly timed application of bactericides
    during flowering to control blossom blight phase
  • Cu
  • Streptomycin 2-3 applications
  • III. Insect control esp. aphids and plant bugs to
    prevent infections
  • IV. Avoid planting susceptible cultivars
  • V. Apples more resistant
  • VI. Over stimulation (succulent growth part.
    Susc.) with high N should be avoided

31
Black Rot
  • Pathogen Botryosphaeria obtuse-
  • Economic Effects
  • Limb Canker phase is most important in the
    northeastern and north central apple-growing
    regions of the United States
  • Leaf Spot and fruit rot phase are most important
    in the southeast

32
Symptoms
  • Appear 1 to 3 weeks after first petal fall
  • -leaf infections begin as small purple flecks
    rapidly enlarging to 1/8 to 1/4 in. diameter.
  • -Margins remain purple, center turns brown frog
    eye appearance
  • Infections on young fruit
  • -reddish flecks, developing into purple pimples
  • -enlarge to dark brown necrotic areas
  • Infections on more mature fruit
  • -Black, irregularly shaped
  • -surrounded by red halo
  • -enlarging characterized by series of
    concentric rings alternating black to brown
  • Infected fruit mummify and remain attached to
    tree
  • Limbs and branches
  • -reddish brown and slightly sunken cankers large
    and small
  • -branches weak break with heavy crop load

33
Symptoms
34
Symptoms
35
Symptoms
36
Disease Cycle
  • -Over-winters in dead bark, twigs, cankers, and
    mummified fruit
  • -Ascospores (spring) and conidia released during
    rainfall washed or blown onto fruit or foliage
  • -Sepal infection occurs after bud break
  • -Fruit infection occurs during growing season
  • -Leaf infection common after petal fall
  • -Early season infection may result in fruit drop

37
Control
  • -Removing dead wood, mummies cankers from trees
  • -Current season prunings should be removed form
    the orchard or chopped with a flail mower
  • -Fungicides, applied from silver tip until
    harvest required to control disease
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