Anthracnose of olive fruits caused by Colletotrichum acutatum was a severe epidemic disease in Pakistan and occurred in September 2020. The estimated disease incident was recorded as 59%. Anthracnose causes… Click to show full abstract
Anthracnose of olive fruits caused by Colletotrichum acutatum was a severe epidemic disease in Pakistan and occurred in September 2020. The estimated disease incident was recorded as 59%. Anthracnose causes a significant reduction in yield and quality traits. Anthracnose has been found in several orchards. Agricultural practices, environmental factors, and disease aggressiveness vary between orchards. So, we looked at spore size, cultural traits, morphological variation, growth pattern, and pathogenicity of different strains of C. acutatum from various orchards. Molecular and phylogenetic analysis confirmed the isolated strains as Colletotrichum acutatum. 15 C. acutatum isolates from olive orchards were tested for susceptibility to four commercial fungicides (P<0.001). The examined isolates' in vitro fungicide sensitivity varied with fungicide concentration. EC50 (Effective Concentration) values were observed for Difenoconazole, Tebuconazole, Carbendazim, and Cyprodinil, ranging from 0.12 to 2.69 g mL-1. Based on the findings of the fungal growth inhibition studies, carbendazim has been found only fungicide that effectively reduces (P<0.001) anthracnose caused by C. acutatum strains. Additionally, results revealed that pre-harvest site treatments of different fungicides greatly decreased anthracnose infections on olive fruit (70-90%), and post-harvest site applications significantly reduced disease prevalence and severity (75-95%). The fungicide carbendazim significantly decreased pre-and post-harvest anthracnose infection on olive cultivar. This study suggests that the latter compound might be used to control olive anthracnose in Pakistan while lowering environmental impact and fungicide resistance.
               
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