Author:
El-Tarabily K. A.,Hardy G. E. St J.,Sivasithamparam K.,McKay A. G.
Abstract
Summary. Glasshouse trials were conducted to examine the
effect of lime or gypsum amendments on the development of cavity spot disease
of carrots in soil artificially infested with
Pythium coloratum. Each amendment was applied to soil
from the field at 4000 or 8000 kg/ha. Lime at both application rates
significantly (P<0.05) reduced the incidence of the
disease. In contrast, both gypsum treatments had no effect on the incidence of
cavity spot disease. There was no significant
(P>0.05) difference in calcium concentration between
carrot roots grown in unamended, lime- or gypsum-amended soil with or without
the pathogen. Calcium did not appear to play a direct role in the reduction of
cavity spot disease. Under the controlled conditions of this glasshouse trial,
reduction in the incidence of cavity spot appeared to be related to the
increase in soil pH associated with the application of lime. Field trials at
the site of soil collection will confirm whether this mechanism is related to
field reduction of the disease following liming.
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Cited by
7 articles.
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