Impact of preplant soil treatments on survival of Phythophthora in citrus soils

Several different approaches are used with respect to land preparation prior to replanting citrus in Arizona. A study was initiated to examine the effect of cultural preplant practices on the survival of Phytophthora in citrus orchard soils. In June, 1998, a 2-gallon volume of soil was collected fro...

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Main Authors: Matheron, Michael, Porchas, Martin, Maurer, Michael
Other Authors: Wright, Glenn
Language:en_US
Published: College of Agriculture, University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ) 1999
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/222512
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spelling ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-2225122015-10-23T04:55:20Z Impact of preplant soil treatments on survival of Phythophthora in citrus soils Matheron, Michael Porchas, Martin Maurer, Michael Wright, Glenn Kilby, Mike Agriculture -- Arizona Citrus fruits -- Arizona Citrus -- Diseases Several different approaches are used with respect to land preparation prior to replanting citrus in Arizona. A study was initiated to examine the effect of cultural preplant practices on the survival of Phytophthora in citrus orchard soils. In June, 1998, a 2-gallon volume of soil was collected from eight different sites within a mature lemon planting on a sandy soil in Yuma or a lemon planting on a heavier soil in Mesa, AZ. Each initial sample was pre-tested, found to contain Phytophthora parasitica, then thoroughly mixed and distributed into six 1-qt plastic containers, which were subjected to different environmental and cultural conditions. The soil in each container was tested for the presence of P. parasitica 1, 4 and 9 months after initiation of the study. The preliminary results of this ongoing study are as follows. Detection of P. parasitica was lower in non-irrigated as compared to irrigated soil. P. parasitica was not detected in non-irrigated soil subjected to a mean temperature of 38°C (100° F) for 3 months. During the 9-month period of time, detection of P. parasitica in soil planted to alfalfa was not reduced compared to soil planted to citrus. Of the treatments examined, dry summer fallow may be the most effective method of reducing the population of P. parasitica to below detectable levels; however, these preliminary findings must be validated by additional planned tests. 1999-11 text Article http://hdl.handle.net/10150/222512 Citrus and Deciduous Fruit and Nut Research Report en_US AZ1138 Series P-117 College of Agriculture, University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ)
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Agriculture -- Arizona
Citrus fruits -- Arizona
Citrus -- Diseases
spellingShingle Agriculture -- Arizona
Citrus fruits -- Arizona
Citrus -- Diseases
Matheron, Michael
Porchas, Martin
Maurer, Michael
Impact of preplant soil treatments on survival of Phythophthora in citrus soils
description Several different approaches are used with respect to land preparation prior to replanting citrus in Arizona. A study was initiated to examine the effect of cultural preplant practices on the survival of Phytophthora in citrus orchard soils. In June, 1998, a 2-gallon volume of soil was collected from eight different sites within a mature lemon planting on a sandy soil in Yuma or a lemon planting on a heavier soil in Mesa, AZ. Each initial sample was pre-tested, found to contain Phytophthora parasitica, then thoroughly mixed and distributed into six 1-qt plastic containers, which were subjected to different environmental and cultural conditions. The soil in each container was tested for the presence of P. parasitica 1, 4 and 9 months after initiation of the study. The preliminary results of this ongoing study are as follows. Detection of P. parasitica was lower in non-irrigated as compared to irrigated soil. P. parasitica was not detected in non-irrigated soil subjected to a mean temperature of 38°C (100° F) for 3 months. During the 9-month period of time, detection of P. parasitica in soil planted to alfalfa was not reduced compared to soil planted to citrus. Of the treatments examined, dry summer fallow may be the most effective method of reducing the population of P. parasitica to below detectable levels; however, these preliminary findings must be validated by additional planned tests.
author2 Wright, Glenn
author_facet Wright, Glenn
Matheron, Michael
Porchas, Martin
Maurer, Michael
author Matheron, Michael
Porchas, Martin
Maurer, Michael
author_sort Matheron, Michael
title Impact of preplant soil treatments on survival of Phythophthora in citrus soils
title_short Impact of preplant soil treatments on survival of Phythophthora in citrus soils
title_full Impact of preplant soil treatments on survival of Phythophthora in citrus soils
title_fullStr Impact of preplant soil treatments on survival of Phythophthora in citrus soils
title_full_unstemmed Impact of preplant soil treatments on survival of Phythophthora in citrus soils
title_sort impact of preplant soil treatments on survival of phythophthora in citrus soils
publisher College of Agriculture, University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ)
publishDate 1999
url http://hdl.handle.net/10150/222512
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