American Phytopathological Society, Plant Disease, 7(105), p. 1912-1918, 2021
DOI: 10.1094/pdis-06-20-1283-re
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Stemphylium leaf blight (SLB), caused by Stemphylium vesicarium, is an important foliar disease of onion in northeastern North America. The pathogen produces conidia and ascospores, but the relative contributions of these spore types to epidemics in onion is not known. Determining the abundance of ascospores and conidia during the growing season could contribute to a disease forecasting model. Airborne ascospores and conidia of S. vesicarium were trapped during the growing season of 2015 and 2016 at an onion trial in southern Ontario, Canada, using a Burkard 7-day volumetric sampler. Meteorological data were recorded hourly. Ascospore numbers peaked before the crop was planted and declined rapidly with time and at daily mean air temperatures >15°C. Conidia were present throughout the growing season and appear to be closely related to the development of SLB on onion. Daily spore concentrations were variable, but 59 to 73% of ascospores and approximately 60% of conidia were captured between 0600 and 1200 h. Spore concentrations increased 24 to 72 h after rainfall and precipitation and leaf wetness duration were consistently and positively associated with increases in numbers of conidia and subsequent SLB incidence. The first symptoms of SLB coincided with high numbers of conidia, rainfall, leaf wetness duration ≥8 h, and days with average daily temperature ≥18°C. The number of airborne ascospores was very low by the time SLB symptoms were observed. Ascospores may initiate infection on alternative hosts in early spring, while conidia are the most important inoculum for the epidemic on onions.