Resumen:
Coffee cultivation is one of the most important crops in the world, one of the main diseases of coffee is
rooster's eye, at high infestation rates can cause leaf defoliation and low crop yields, the objective of the
present study was to determine the type of spatial variability of the disease “rooster's eye” caused by the
fungus Mycena citricolor Berkeley & Curtis (Agaricales: Mycenaaceae), in the coffee crop, using spatial
statistics (Spatial Analysis by Distance Indexes “SADIE” and Geostatistics), the experiment was conducted
in the municipalities of Sultepec and Temascaltepec in the State of Mexico from March to August 2022,
where two plots of 0.5 hectares per municipality were established in 50 quadrants, taking four plants per
quadrant, evaluating 36 leaves per plant, from which it was obtained that the presence of the disease is
present in all months, however, the percentage of infestation varied according to climatic conditions such
as temperature, relative humidity and precipitation, with respect to the SADIE indices, the Ia and Ja values
indicate a spatial distribution in aggregates distributed in several centers, with respect to geostatistics, all
the theoretical models of the semivariograms were adjusted to the spherical model, and maps were
generated using the ordinary kriging method to determine the spatial behavior of rooster's eye in the
different samplings, the use of spatial statistics helps to determine the behavior of the disease being a good
tool that can change the strategies of conventional or traditional agriculture, since the application of inputs
is not carried out in a homogeneous manner, but rather according to the quantification of spatial and
temporal variability, allowing producers to carry out integrated disease management programs for the
benefit of the environment.