Wheat Stripe Rust Confirmed In Three Arkansas Counties
LITTLE ROCK, ARK.
Stripe rust, the most important disease for wheat growers in
Arkansas, has been found in fields in Jefferson, Lincoln and Lee
counties.
Terry Spurlock, an extension plant pathologist for the University of
Arkansas System Division of Agriculture based in Monticello, said the
disease is appearing early in the season, similar to circumstances
during the 2012 and 2013 growing seasons.
Spurlock said that although several “hot spots” of affected plants,
found in clusters measuring from one to three meters in diameter, have
been identified, cool winter temperatures are preventing the fungus from
having much effect on the young crops.
“A lot of [the fungus] is on lower leaves,” Spurlock said. “It’s
probably not doing much, as cold as it’s been. It’s just hanging out.
Some of it was probably infection from the fall after the wheat emerged,
although perhaps a few of these plants were infected recently.”
In affected plants, yellow or orange fungal pustules can be seen on
leaves. Spores can be spread on the wind, or on humans or animals moving
through the crop. If water is present on the leaf surfaces, the spores
can germinate and infect the plant, Spurlock said.
Wheat is typically one of the top five crops planted in Arkansas,
according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s National Agricultural
Statistical Service. In the fall of 2014, approximately 390,000 acres of
wheat were planted in the state.
Many wheat varieties in Arkansas are resistant to the fungus once
they reach the adult stage, Spurlock said. However, if a plant is
infected in an earlier phase, growers can suffer yield losses.
Avoid preemptive spraying
Spurlock cautioned growers against preemptively spraying fungicide, even if they find stripe rust on young plants in a field.
“Unfortunately, we deal with a lot of resistance issues with fungi,
and especially fungi that reproduce as rapidly as some of these foliar
pathogens,” Spurlock said. “The more applications of the same type of
fungicides, the higher the risk is of developing a resistant population.
Every time you spray a fungicide, you’re selecting against all the
susceptible fungi that are out there, and selecting for everything
that’s already resistant in that population, and it may not be the
predominant population, or the predominant part of the population. But
if you destroy all of it’s competition, it sort of has the run of the
place, and it can become the dominant population.”
Spurlock said that growers’ best bet was to actively scout their
fields as the season progresses and apply fungicides only where stripe
rust appears to be taking hold, as opposed to tank-mixing the fungicide
with other pesticides and spraying the entire crop.
“The problem with plant disease is, it’s never just one thing,”
Spurlock said. “You kind of have to continuously scout. And just because
you have stripe rust, it doesn’t mean it’s the only disease you’re
going to have to deal with throughout a season. You have to approach it
holistically, rather than just dealing with stripe rust. And I think
that’s how most of our growers think about it.” ∆