Abstract
X. arboricola pv. pruni (Xap) is present on Prunus spp. in some European countries,\r\nand it is listed as an A2 quarantine pest by EPPO; its importance in Northern Italy has increased\r\nin the last decade. An empiric model predicting Xap infection has been developed in late ‘90s.\r\nOccurrence of the first seasonal infection was monitored in peach orchards of Romagna, in 1992\r\nto 2008, and compared to model predictions: an infection was predicted when there were at least\r\n3 successive rainy days, with temperature between 14 and 19°C; symptom’s onset was expected\r\nafter one to four weeks of incubation. Xap symptoms appeared in 10 out of 17 years; first\r\nseasonal symptoms become visible between 19 May and 12 July. These infections were always\r\ncorrectly predicted by the model, with an average incubation period of three weeks. Five infection\r\nperiods were predicted by the model that did not result in actual infection. In five years the\r\ndisease did not appear at all. In four of these years the model did not predict infection all season\r\nlong, while in one year it wrongly predicted two possible infection periods. Sensitivity, specificity\r\nand accuracy of the model showed that one would have somewhat more confidence in predictions\r\nof non-infections than in predictions of infections. In a practical use of the model, this would lead\r\nto some unjustified alarms.
Lingua originale | Inglese |
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pagine (da-a) | 565-569 |
Numero di pagine | 5 |
Rivista | IOBC/WPRS BULLETIN |
Volume | 54 |
Numero di pubblicazione | 1 |
Stato di pubblicazione | Pubblicato - 2010 |
Pubblicato esternamente | Sì |
Keywords
- bacterial spot
- disease modelling
- infection period
- validation
- weather