Skip to main content

Rain rain...

It has been pretty wet week so far. At Winchester, we observed about 11 hours of wetness on the 26th with an average temperature of 64F, 50+ hours (and counting) from the 28th to today with an average temperature of 61F. It is certainly long and warm enough for Botrytis infection.

Whether we require a fungicide application for Botrytis or not at this point depends on several potential factors. The first one, of course, is whether you had a previous application or not. If you had a previous application to cover these rain events, you probably do not need to be concerned much.

The second one is a time to harvest. If you still have several weeks to go, you may want to consider an application, but if you will harvest within a few days, I am not sure an application of fungicide will help you much since we do not have any curative materials for Botrytis. Whatever we spray at this point will be good against future infections, but not the infection happened already.

The third is cultivar. Chances are, many fruits out there at this point would be that of red cultivars, which is relatively less susceptible to Botrytis infection than whites, especially the one with a loose cluster architecture. I can see some white cultivars such as Petit Manseng can still be out there, but Petit Manseng is also less susceptible to Botrytis than many other whites.

The fourth is the environment. The rain this week was pretty severe, but the last major rain event at Winchester was 18 August. We had wetness event here and there, but these were relatively short events (many are less than 5 hours in leaf wetness), thus, I have a feeling that this dry weather did not favor spore production of Botrytis. Thus, even the environment was favoring this week, spores might not be available to cause infection. Since it has been pretty dry, the application you have made a while ago may still not be washed away too.

The other late season disease you may want to consider is sour rot. With this rain, berry skin may be damaged and that may invite sour rot pathogens to come in. Our understanding is that sour rot is caused by several different types of pathogens, thus, often time, a broad spectrum fungicide is recommended. I do not think any of fungicide works to stop the on-going infection, but you may want to stop the spread of sour rot. Something like copper or captan may be a good choice, especially if you have a few weeks to harvest. Both Switch and Fracture list Botrytis and sour rot (for suppression, not control) as a target disease. Also, polyoxin-D materials such as Ph-D or Oso list not only Botrytis, but also Alternalia, which is also known to cause late season general rot, as target pathogens.

Lastly, here is re-posting of a list of fungicide with relatively low PHI for your reference.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Season's Greetings!

I hope you and your family have a good holiday season and a Happy (and safe) New Year! Thanks again for your support of our programs. Here are some recent media highlights. 😉 The link will open a new window. AHS AREC promotional video  that highlights some of our activities. The link did not work... It asks you to log in to VT. I will request the IT people to change the setting, but in a meantime, here's the same video. We also appeared in  the Library of Congress project “Winery Workers of Virginia”. One more announcement: I will be moving this blog to a new location ( ext.grapepathology.org ) early next year. I had to make a change due to the email subscription service, which has been terminated.  You do not need to change your bookmark or your email subscription. The URL will be forwarded to a new site and your email subscription has been moved to a new site already. 

Downy mildew gallery

At Winchester, we had light rain events during the night of 6/12/09, but it was short events and the relative humidity was low (80% or so), thus it probably did not promote any infections. However, we are experiencing continuing favorable nights for downy mildew sporulation (average T>55F, high RH (80-100%)) for 10 days now. Yesterday, we conducted a formal disease assessment, and observed first incidence of powdery mildew for this season. We had plenty of infection events in last two months, so it was not surprising. At this point, it is a trace level of infection on untreated vines. Downy mildew was the major disease so far. We had up to 40% incidence on untreated vines. Next runner-up was black rot. It varies vine to vine, but some of vine had 10-15% incidence. Phomopsis was omnipresent as I expected from early May rain falls, but severity was low overall. We will examine diseases again in the near future, and I will update as the season goes. Here is downy mildew ga

Recent downy mildew risk events

 It seems that several rain events have happened over the course of the past two weeks or so. Here is a summary of recent downy mildew risk events, based on the NEWA stations and DMCast. Bristol, VA Fifteen days with potential DM infection event(s) since Sept 1. The latest event happened last Sunday. Floyd, VA Eleven days with potential DM infection event(s) since Sept 1. The last event happened last Friday. Charles City, VA Twelve days with potential DM infection event(s) since Sept 1. The latest event happened yesterday. Central VA Since there was a wide variation among stations, I am listing several around Central VA. Tyro, VA Nine days with potential DM infection event(s) since Sept 1. The latest event happened yesterday. Red Hill and Crozet, VA Only one day with potential DM infection event(s) since Sept 1. Olympic Lake Thirteen days with potential DM infection event(s) since Sept 1. The latest event happened last Sunday. Washington, VA Eight days with potential DM infection event