Studies on the application of a copper fungicide for the control of coffee leaf rust :

A proprietary cuprous oxide fungicide was applied to unshaded single-stem coffee as both a high- and a low-volume spray. Initial deposition of fungicide was not affected by the volume of application. An improved sampling method, used in the second year of the trial, showed that despite efforts to direct the spray on to the under leaf surface, more fungicide was applied to the upper. The deposits arising from high-volume applications were more susceptible to weathering and this weathering was most marked from the upper leaf surfaces. It was noted that irrigation within 48hr. of spraying caused a considerable reduction in fungicide deposit. A visual scoring technique indicated that a large proportion of the leaves received no fungicide at all and it was concluded that subsequent redistribution may occur. The biological assessments indicated that high- and low-volume application of copper fungicide gave equally good leaf rust control and leaf retention. Reducing the fungicide applicationfrom 5 to 1 lb./acre resulted in reduced fungicidal efficiency. A "disease control index" was developed to show the relationship between the level of fungicide deposit and the degree of leaf rust control. A mean total deposit of approximately 60 mg./m2 leaf area was required for satisfactory protection

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: 103314 Park, P.O., 51929 Burdekin, D.A.
Format: biblioteca
Language:eng
Published: 1964
Subjects:COFFEA ARABICA, HEMILEIA, ROYA, ENFERMEDADES FUNGOSAS, CONTROL DE HONGOS, KENIA, CONTROL QUIMICO, HEMILEIA VASTATRIX,
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id KOHA-OAI-BVE:80322
record_format koha
spelling KOHA-OAI-BVE:803222020-02-03T21:47:44ZStudies on the application of a copper fungicide for the control of coffee leaf rust : 103314 Park, P.O. 51929 Burdekin, D.A. 1964engA proprietary cuprous oxide fungicide was applied to unshaded single-stem coffee as both a high- and a low-volume spray. Initial deposition of fungicide was not affected by the volume of application. An improved sampling method, used in the second year of the trial, showed that despite efforts to direct the spray on to the under leaf surface, more fungicide was applied to the upper. The deposits arising from high-volume applications were more susceptible to weathering and this weathering was most marked from the upper leaf surfaces. It was noted that irrigation within 48hr. of spraying caused a considerable reduction in fungicide deposit. A visual scoring technique indicated that a large proportion of the leaves received no fungicide at all and it was concluded that subsequent redistribution may occur. The biological assessments indicated that high- and low-volume application of copper fungicide gave equally good leaf rust control and leaf retention. Reducing the fungicide applicationfrom 5 to 1 lb./acre resulted in reduced fungicidal efficiency. A "disease control index" was developed to show the relationship between the level of fungicide deposit and the degree of leaf rust control. A mean total deposit of approximately 60 mg./m2 leaf area was required for satisfactory protectionA proprietary cuprous oxide fungicide was applied to unshaded single-stem coffee as both a high- and a low-volume spray. Initial deposition of fungicide was not affected by the volume of application. An improved sampling method, used in the second year of the trial, showed that despite efforts to direct the spray on to the under leaf surface, more fungicide was applied to the upper. The deposits arising from high-volume applications were more susceptible to weathering and this weathering was most marked from the upper leaf surfaces. It was noted that irrigation within 48hr. of spraying caused a considerable reduction in fungicide deposit. A visual scoring technique indicated that a large proportion of the leaves received no fungicide at all and it was concluded that subsequent redistribution may occur. The biological assessments indicated that high- and low-volume application of copper fungicide gave equally good leaf rust control and leaf retention. Reducing the fungicide applicationfrom 5 to 1 lb./acre resulted in reduced fungicidal efficiency. A "disease control index" was developed to show the relationship between the level of fungicide deposit and the degree of leaf rust control. A mean total deposit of approximately 60 mg./m2 leaf area was required for satisfactory protectionCOFFEA ARABICAHEMILEIAROYAENFERMEDADES FUNGOSASCONTROL DE HONGOSKENIACONTROL QUIMICOHEMILEIA VASTATRIXAnnals of Applied Biology (RU)
institution IICA
collection Koha
country Costa Rica
countrycode CR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode cat-sibiica
tag biblioteca
region America Central
libraryname Sistema de Bibliotecas IICA/CATIE
language eng
topic COFFEA ARABICA
HEMILEIA
ROYA
ENFERMEDADES FUNGOSAS
CONTROL DE HONGOS
KENIA
CONTROL QUIMICO
HEMILEIA VASTATRIX
COFFEA ARABICA
HEMILEIA
ROYA
ENFERMEDADES FUNGOSAS
CONTROL DE HONGOS
KENIA
CONTROL QUIMICO
HEMILEIA VASTATRIX
spellingShingle COFFEA ARABICA
HEMILEIA
ROYA
ENFERMEDADES FUNGOSAS
CONTROL DE HONGOS
KENIA
CONTROL QUIMICO
HEMILEIA VASTATRIX
COFFEA ARABICA
HEMILEIA
ROYA
ENFERMEDADES FUNGOSAS
CONTROL DE HONGOS
KENIA
CONTROL QUIMICO
HEMILEIA VASTATRIX
103314 Park, P.O.
51929 Burdekin, D.A.
Studies on the application of a copper fungicide for the control of coffee leaf rust :
description A proprietary cuprous oxide fungicide was applied to unshaded single-stem coffee as both a high- and a low-volume spray. Initial deposition of fungicide was not affected by the volume of application. An improved sampling method, used in the second year of the trial, showed that despite efforts to direct the spray on to the under leaf surface, more fungicide was applied to the upper. The deposits arising from high-volume applications were more susceptible to weathering and this weathering was most marked from the upper leaf surfaces. It was noted that irrigation within 48hr. of spraying caused a considerable reduction in fungicide deposit. A visual scoring technique indicated that a large proportion of the leaves received no fungicide at all and it was concluded that subsequent redistribution may occur. The biological assessments indicated that high- and low-volume application of copper fungicide gave equally good leaf rust control and leaf retention. Reducing the fungicide applicationfrom 5 to 1 lb./acre resulted in reduced fungicidal efficiency. A "disease control index" was developed to show the relationship between the level of fungicide deposit and the degree of leaf rust control. A mean total deposit of approximately 60 mg./m2 leaf area was required for satisfactory protection
format
topic_facet COFFEA ARABICA
HEMILEIA
ROYA
ENFERMEDADES FUNGOSAS
CONTROL DE HONGOS
KENIA
CONTROL QUIMICO
HEMILEIA VASTATRIX
author 103314 Park, P.O.
51929 Burdekin, D.A.
author_facet 103314 Park, P.O.
51929 Burdekin, D.A.
author_sort 103314 Park, P.O.
title Studies on the application of a copper fungicide for the control of coffee leaf rust :
title_short Studies on the application of a copper fungicide for the control of coffee leaf rust :
title_full Studies on the application of a copper fungicide for the control of coffee leaf rust :
title_fullStr Studies on the application of a copper fungicide for the control of coffee leaf rust :
title_full_unstemmed Studies on the application of a copper fungicide for the control of coffee leaf rust :
title_sort studies on the application of a copper fungicide for the control of coffee leaf rust :
publishDate 1964
work_keys_str_mv AT 103314parkpo studiesontheapplicationofacopperfungicideforthecontrolofcoffeeleafrust
AT 51929burdekinda studiesontheapplicationofacopperfungicideforthecontrolofcoffeeleafrust
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