“…Although mildew is common and causes considerable damage in cool areas; they are even more common and severe in areas with warm, dry climates, because in these conditions the wind easily detaches and spreads the conidia (RomeroCova, 1988); also, it has been established that mildew presents itself in the succulent tissue of the host in cool, shady areas (Yarwood, 1973). The lives of conidia are brief and they are favored by high relative humidity, but not by rain and inmersion in water (Sivapalan, 1993a;Sivapalan, 1993b). In general, the mycelium is epiphitic, except in genuses Leveillula, Phyllactinia, Pleochaeta where the mycelium is hemi-endophytic, and occasionally in species of Cystotheca; in this case, hyphae penetrate the leaves through the stomata and form mycelia inside, although the mycelia of the species of Leveillula are more abundant inside the leaf of the host (Braun et al, 2002).…”