Authors
S.
Sanogo
,
Former Graduate Research Assistant
,
S. P.
Pennypacker
,
Professor
,
R. E.
Stevenson
,
Senior Research Assistant
, and
A. A.
MacNab
,
Professor, Department of Plant Pathology, Pennsylvania State University, University Park 16802
ABSTRACT
Field experiments were conducted to determine the relationship of tomato anthracnose to weather variables. Sixteen potted tomato plants were exposed to field conditions within rows of tomato plants for 4 consecutive days at various time periods during the 1993 and 1994 summer growing seasons. Incidence of fruit infection by Colletotrichum coccodes was correlated with rain variables (amount and duration of rain) alone and in combination with other meteorological factors. The best fitting regression equation, accounting for 72% of the variation in anthracnose incidence (arcsine-square root transformed), was Y = 111.77 - 1.16 HNRo, in which HNRo is the numbers of hours during which no rainfall occurs within 4-day intervals that tomato fruit were exposed to field conditions in central Pennsylvania.