Grey mould populations in northern German sweet cherry and plum orchards: selection of fungicide-resistant Botrytis cinerea strains over sensitive B. pseudocinerea by fungicide treatments

Second only to brown rot caused by Monilinia spp., grey mould caused by Botrytis spp. is one of the most important pre- and post-harvest diseases of stone fruit in northern Germany. Among 484 Botrytis isolates from sweet cherries produced under integrated pest management (IPM), 60.3% showed resistan...

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Veröffentlicht in:European journal of plant pathology 2020-07, Vol.157 (3), p.615-623
Hauptverfasser: Hauschildt, Meta, Steinkellner, Siegrid, Weber, Roland W. S.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Second only to brown rot caused by Monilinia spp., grey mould caused by Botrytis spp. is one of the most important pre- and post-harvest diseases of stone fruit in northern Germany. Among 484 Botrytis isolates from sweet cherries produced under integrated pest management (IPM), 60.3% showed resistance to QoI fungicides and 54.6% to boscalid, reflecting the heavy use of these compounds in regional production. More modest resistance frequencies were recorded for fenhexamid (20.7%), fluopyram (8.3%), fludioxonil (9.1%) and cyprodinil (21.9%). A 7.6% share of isolates possessed multiple resistance to at least five of these fungicides. Resistance was also detected for two fungicides no longer registered in cherries, viz. thiophanate-methyl (15.7%) and iprodione (20.9%). Similar results were obtained for 141 Botrytis isolates from IPM plum orchards. In contrast, in organically produced cherries (88 Botrytis isolates) resistance frequencies were 
ISSN:0929-1873
1573-8469
DOI:10.1007/s10658-020-02026-5