CLIMEX and DYMEX simulations of the potential occurrence of rice blast disease in south-eastern Australia
V. Lanoiselet, E. J. Cother and G. J. Ash
Australasian Plant Pathology 31(1) 1 - 7
Abstract
Rice blast, caused by Magnaporthe grisea does not occur
in Australia. The potential for infection and sporulation events by
M. grisea under Australian conditions was investigated
using two software programs, DYMEX and CLIMEX. The climate of Deniliquin, NSW,
representative of the southern Australian rice-growing areas, was projected to
the rest of the world and compared, using CLIMEX, with foreign regions where
rice blast occurs. Most of the locations whose climates matched that of
Deniliquin were within the distribution range of rice blast and the potential
for establishment of the disease therefore appears high. A model was also
developed and run under DYMEX to predict the potential number of infection and
sporulation events of the pathogen. The model was run for the period
1988–1999 with the meteorological data of four representative locations
in the Australian ricegrowing region. Out of a possible 11 rice-growing
seasons, the number of years favourable for M. grisea
ranged from two at Griffith to nine at Yanco. The rice blast model confirmed
the CLIMEX results and highlighted the potential threat of rice blast to the
Australian rice industry. This paper reports the first disease model developed
using DYMEX.
Keywords: disease forecasting, disease model,
Full text doi:10.1071/AP01070
© CSIRO 2002





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