Spatial Variation and Temporal Dynamics of Fungicide Sensitivity in Venturia effusa Within a Pecan Orchard

Abstract
An 18-ha commercial pecan orchard was sampled over 3 years to study the spatial and temporal variation in fungicide sensitivity of Venturia effusa, cause of pecan scab. The orchard was divided into a two-dimensional, 8×8 grid of 64 quadrats, each containing nine trees (unless there were missing trees), and samples were collected once per year from each quadrat to be tested for sensitivity to fentin hydroxide, propiconazole, and thiophanate-methyl. Averaged across the orchard, insensitivity to all three fungicides was significantly lower in 2016 compared with 2015, but significantly greater for fentin hydroxide and thiophanate-methyl in 2017. Although, significant spatial autocorrelation was observed for sensitivity to propiconazole in 2017 and for thiophanate-methyl in 2015 and 2017, indicating clustering, all other fungicide-by-year combinations were not significant. Omnidirectional spatial dependency was observed for sensitivity to propiconazole and thiophanate-methyl in 2017. In both instances, the semivariance increased linearly with lag distance; however, the range of spatial dependence was greater than 276.5 m and could not be estimated accurately. Additionally, a separate sampling was conducted in all 3 years to identify an appropriate sampling size and pattern for fungicide sensitivity screening. A leaflet sample size of 165 in eleven groups of 15 allowed for accurate sensitivity testing for the three fungicides in all 3 years; however, a sample size of 45 leaflets in three groups of 15 was sufficient for quantifying sensitivity for propiconazole and thiophanate-methyl, in most cases. These results indicate that considerable biological variation in fungicide sensitivity exists in orchard-scale populations of V. effusa and that the spatial characteristics of those populations may differ in two-dimensional space depending on the growing season.