Summer pruning as a method for reducing flyspeck disease on apple fruit

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Abstract

Summer pruning of apples, as opposed to the conventional commercial practice of dormant pruning, consistently reduced the incidence of flyspeck on apple fruit by approximately 50% in each of 2 years in trees where no fungicides were applied. In commercial orchard blocks using fungicides, summer pruning also produced a slight but significant decrease in disease severity. There appear to be at least two mechanisms contributing to decreased flyspeck incidence and severity in summer-pruned apple trees. Summer pruning resulted in a small change in the apple canopy microclimate, decreasing the hours of relative humidity >95% in the canopy by 63% and increasing the evaporative potential. Summer pruning also resulted in improved spray deposition in the upper two-thirds of the tree canopy when applications were made with an airblast sprayer.

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APA

Cooley, D. R., Gamble, J. W., & Autio, W. R. (1997). Summer pruning as a method for reducing flyspeck disease on apple fruit. Plant Disease, 81(10), 1123–1126. https://doi.org/10.1094/PDIS.1997.81.10.1123

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