Fungicides - Beneficial and Harmful Aspects 2011
DOI: 10.5772/27199
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Multiple Fungicide Resistance in Botrytis: A Growing Problem in German Soft-Fruit Production

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Cited by 7 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…Individual farmers differ strongly in the intensity of their fungicide use, and we have obtained circumstantial evidence that MR strains are most frequent in fields which have been subjected to high fungicide spray intensities for many years (Weber, 2011; Weber and Entrop, 2011). For all strawberry and raspberry fields described here, we know from growers' records that five or more applications of Botrytis fungicides were made annually.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…Individual farmers differ strongly in the intensity of their fungicide use, and we have obtained circumstantial evidence that MR strains are most frequent in fields which have been subjected to high fungicide spray intensities for many years (Weber, 2011; Weber and Entrop, 2011). For all strawberry and raspberry fields described here, we know from growers' records that five or more applications of Botrytis fungicides were made annually.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…Weekly applications of a single MOA or mixtures of single-site actives appear to have selected for multi-resistant B. cinerea strains in blackberry and strawberry (Li et al 2014a). Resistance to one fungicide in a multi-resistant isolate could be indirectly selected by the application of another fungicide for which resistance already exists, also known as "selection by association" theory (Hu et al 2016;Weber and Entrop 2011). In this report, the characterisation of multi-resistant isolates resistant to boscalid could be an example of this process as recent selection pressure from this fungicide is now essentially non-existent in B. cinerea populations.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Weber, unpublished data). Furthermore, it is conceivable that repeated applications of a currently used fungicide might give rise to a co-selection of resistance against a fungicide no longer in use, provided that a large share of a Botrytis population harbours resistance to both compounds (Weber & Entrop 2011). This possibility could explain a striking accumulation of resistance against two such redundant fungicides (thiophanate-methyl and iprodione) in strains possessing quintuple resistance to all current fungicide classes in Northern German soft-fruit fields (Weber 2011).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Whereas MBC fungicides and iprodione had been phased out from these crops since 1976 and 2008, respectively, the other five fungicides were in common use at the time of the survey. In searching for an explanation of such high levels of resistance, Weber & Entrop (2011) found a strong relationship between the number of blossom-time fungicide applications in individual soft-fruit fields and the frequency of resistance in Botrytis infections in the harvest of the same year. Further, these authors confirmed by forced-selection trials that resistance to a specific fungicide may accumulate in a Botrytis population within one vegetation period if this compound is repeatedly sprayed at blossom time, which is the primary infection period for Botrytis in soft fruits.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%