Biology and epidemiology of Moniliophthora roreri, causal agent of moniliophthora pod rot of cacao

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Date
2017Author
Leandro Muñoz, Mariela E.
Type
Tesis de doctorado
Metadata
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Tesis (Doctorado) - CATIE, Turrialba (Costa Rica), 2017
Abstract
Moniliophthora pod rot (MPR) is one of the main factors limiting cocoa production in Latin
America. Currently insufficient information on the biology and epidemiology of the pathogen limits
the development of efficient management options to control MPR. The purpose of this study was to
identify meteorological and production variables as epidemiological predictors of the MPR disease
and, coupled with the existing evidence on the MPR-cacao pathosystem, to develop a conceptual
model. Information obtained is strategic for better understanding of the pathosystem, to guide
researchers to define new studies and to improve control methods. The research began with a historical data analysis to determine the influence of the meteorological, productive and genetic resistance variables on the disease over time. This analysis revealed that the resistance of the highly resistant clones is considerably stable and possibly durable; however, for the rest of the clones, disease reaction was shown to be significantly influenced by the environment. Also, temperatures during January, April and May are the only climatic variables that
have a significant effect over MPR incidence.
A field trial was then carried out to explain MPR development, onset of symptoms of the disease and fungal sporulation, studying different microclimatic variables for three cacao clones in a range of incomplete resistance. We concluded that water-related variables (positively linked) and temperature (minimum temperature negatively linked while maximum temperature presented a threshold) determine symptom expression for the susceptible clones, while, for the resistant clone CATIE-R4, only temperature (minimum temperature negatively linked and maximum temperature positively linked) showed up as an explicative variable, due to low numbers of CATIE-R4 pods showing symptoms. Differences in resistance among these clones possibly lie in the number of resistant genes accumulated; however, the resistance of the three may be affected by certain environmental conditions. To separate the microclimatic effects on the infection and the symptoms onset, we studied the relationship between the MPR infection process and the onset of symptoms of three different cacao clones through artificial inoculations. We determined that symptoms/signs onset is close enough to the
infection moment that the influence of the microclimate over onset of the symptoms could be
extrapolated to the time of infection.
La moniliasis del cacao es uno de los principales factores que limitan la producción de cacao
en América Latina. Actualmente, la insuficiente información sobre la biología y la epidemiología del
patógeno limita el desarrollo de mecanismos eficientes para el control de la enfermedad. El propósito de este estudio fue identificar las variables meteorológicas y de producción que actúan como
predictores epidemiológicos de la enfermedad y, junto con la evidencia existente sobre el sistema
patológico moniliasis-cacao.
Keywords
Publisher
CATIE, Turrialba (Costa Rica)
URI (Permanet link to cite or share this item)
https://repositorio.catie.ac.cr/handle/11554/8703Collections
- Tesis [3050]