EFFECT OF INTERACTION OF INOCULUM DOSE, CULTIVAR, AND GEOGRAPHIC LOCATION ON THE DEVELOPMENT OF FOLIAR SYMPTOMS OF BACTERIAL RING ROT OF POTATO

Citation
Aag. Westra et al., EFFECT OF INTERACTION OF INOCULUM DOSE, CULTIVAR, AND GEOGRAPHIC LOCATION ON THE DEVELOPMENT OF FOLIAR SYMPTOMS OF BACTERIAL RING ROT OF POTATO, Phytopathology, 84(4), 1994, pp. 410-415
Citations number
25
Categorie Soggetti
Plant Sciences
Journal title
ISSN journal
0031949X
Volume
84
Issue
4
Year of publication
1994
Pages
410 - 415
Database
ISI
SICI code
0031-949X(1994)84:4<410:EOIOID>2.0.ZU;2-H
Abstract
Proportional hazards models were used to estimate hazard and survival functions for both the onset and maximum incidence of foliar symptoms of bacterial ring rot in three potato cultivars (Norchip, Norland, and Russet Burbank) grown at seven locations across the United States (Co lorado, Maine, New York, North Dakota, Oregon, Washington, and Wiscons in) over the period 1988-1990. The models predicted a minimum of 50 an d 82 days after planting for survival probabilities of P < 0.95 and P < 0.05 for symptom onset and maximum disease incidence, respectively. The time frame predicted for these events was affected by cultivar, lo cation, and cultivar by location interaction. There was no proportiona l increase in the relative hazards for symptom onset and maximum disea se incidence due to increased inoculum dose. An increased probability of survival, however, was associated with an increased incidence of ri ght-censoring of the data in plants given the lower inoculum doses. Th e relationship between cultivar maturity and the relative hazard for m aximum disease incidence was not consistent, an observation attributab le to the fact that Russet Burbank displayed stunting (dwarf rosette) as an early season symptom of bacterial ring rot. Symptom onset and ma ximum disease incidence were influenced most by location and location by cultivar interaction, with certain locations displaying a trend tow ard an increased hazard for these events. Differences in the relative hazard for onset and maximum disease incidence among locations, in som e cases, were associated with higher rates of right-censoring of the d ata. However, environmental conditions also appeared to influence the time when onset and maximum disease incidence occurred, because signif icant differences in the hazards for these events were observed in loc ations in which no right-censored observations were recorded.