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Blue mold
of apple is a common rot of stored apples and pears and is caused
by the fungus Penicillium expansum. Other names for the
disease are soft rot and Penicillium rot. Blue mold is a disease
of ripe fruit and develops mostly on apples that are picked before
they are mature. Firm fruit in the same container as decaying fruit
may absorb a moldy odor and flavor.
Symptoms
Soft rot appears as soft, light-brown, watery areas that begin
around injuries or lenticels on the fruit surface. Infected fruit
have a characteristically moldy odor and flavor. When the relative
humidity is high, grayish-blue masses of spores appear on the fruit
surface. These spores are important in spreading the disease. Under
favorable conditions, the entire fruit can rot in 2 weeks. The spores
are very resistant to drying and can survive on the surface of packing
and picking equipment. The spores can also build up in water used
in dumping bulk boxes of fruit, postharvest drench solutions, and
in water flumes used to float fruit onto packing lines.
Disease Cycle
Spores of the soft rot fungus are present almost everywhere and
can survive long periods of unfavorable conditions. These spores
survive from season to season on picking boxes, contaminated bins,
and on storage walls. Injuries to fruit, especially during picking
and handling operations, are the primary points of entry for the
fungus. It is also easy for the fungus to invade lenticels of fruit
that are overmature at harvest or fruit that have been held in storage
too long.
Disease Management
Sanitation and harvesting and handling methods that minimize bruising
and wounding are necessary to control blue mold. Disinfect contaminated
bins and storage walls before reuse. Fruit should be harvested at
optimum maturity. Remove decaying fruit daily from packing houses.
It is also essential to move harvested fruit into cold storage as
rapidly as possible. In many areas of the eastern United States,
Penicillium has developed resistance to the benzimidazole fungicides,
which are used in preharvest sprays and postharvest dips. As a result,
registration for postharvest use on fruit crops have been withdrawn
for most of these fungicides. Postharvest calcium treatments can
aid in helping the fruit become more resistant to decay.
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