Vol. 43 No. 3 (2004)
Research Papers

Observations on the Behaviour of Different Populations of <em>Plasmopara viticola</em> Resistant to QoI Fungicides in Italian Vineyards

Published 2004-12-01

How to Cite

[1]
M. Gullino, G. Gilardi, F. Tinivella, and A. Garibaldi, “Observations on the Behaviour of Different Populations of <em>Plasmopara viticola</em> Resistant to QoI Fungicides in Italian Vineyards”, Phytopathol. Mediterr., vol. 43, no. 3, pp. 341–350, Dec. 2004.

Abstract

Grapevine downy mildew, caused by Plasmopara viticola, is probably the most damaging fungal disease of grapevine world-wide. Among the fungicides recently developed for downy mildew control is the QoI class of fungicides, which inhibits mitochondrial respiration. Since 1999, selected P. viticola populations in northern Italy have been monitored for resistance to QoI fungicides. Detached leaf discs and whole potted plants were used under controlled conditions to test the sampled populations. QoI-resistant populations of P. viticola were found in all the vineyards sampled in 2001 and 2002 in Trentino Alto Adige and Friuli Venezia Giulia, where failure in QoI control was reported. Many of the populations had minimum inhibition concentration (MIC) values 3– 30 times higher than those of sensitive reference populations. Populations of P. viticola sampled from vineyards in Piedmont, where no QoI fungicides had previously been used, showed MIC values equal to, or lower than those of the reference populations. Most of the P. viticola populations collected in Trentino Alto Adige in 2001 showed high virulence in leaf disc test and were not controlled by QoI fungicides, applied both at field and double field rates in the whole plant test. Most of these populations retained their virulence in the subsequent leaf disc test in water.

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