Disease Control
Rotation, Foliar Fungicides Best Advice For Corn, Soybean Diseases
DYERSBURG, TENN.
A program on disease control in corn and
soybean was presented recently by Dr.
Melvin Newman, Professor of Entomology
and Plant Pathology, University of Tennessee
extension service.
Basically his advice boils down to three things.
He suggests farmers should use a resistant variety,
rotate crops and use fungicides, particularly
the foliar fungicides.
“The hottest item that we have now is we
found resistance to frog eye
leaf spot to some of these
strobilurin fungicides, like
Headline, Quadris, and any
of the fungicides that contain
a strobilurin type fungicide,”
he said. “Pathologists
have found this in five locations
now and Tennessee
was one of the first places
where we found it. Now it’s
been found in other states,
including Kentucky and Illinois.
This is just for frog eye,
not other diseases, so it’s not
a problem that we can’t control,
but it is an indication
that our producers should
use resistant varieties and
the different fungicide
classes.”
Newman discussed the different
classes of fungicides
and urged farmers to help
slow down any change of resistance
in frogeye. He said
no difference has been seen
in the other common diseases
like Septoria brown
spot, Anthracnose, Cercospera,
leaf blight.
“We have seen no difference
there,” he said. “We still
get good control with our
strobilurin fungicides on
these diseases; but some of
the best recommendations I
can give farmers today is to plant frogeye resistant
varieties. There are a great number of
varieties that I have rated zero, meaning good
frogeye resistance. There are some 50 varieties
commercially available over the past three years
that farmers can choose from and I advise them
to do that. They need to get at least a variety
that has good resistance to frogeye, in that case
there’s no danger in using a strobilurin fungicide.”
Farmers who don’t have any problems with
frogeye have less chance of getting fungicide resistance
to it, Newman explains; the other recommendation
is to be vigilant and not just
spray indiscriminately. If a farmer has a good
rotation program and uses frogeye resistant varieties
he may not have enough disease to
spray.
“One of the things we want to tell farmers is
just don’t spray everything as a matter of fact
thinking diseases are present," he said. “The
same thing occurs in corn. This is kind of a new
idea to spray corn for disease and the same
thing goes there. Find a hybrid resistant to gray
leaf spot first, this is the main disease we’re
looking at here in the Midsouth and especially
in Tennessee; if you can find varieties that have
some resistance that’s good. One of the biggest
things I’m showing is that rotation with soybeans
or other crops really pays big dividends
in reducing the amount of disease in corn. In
fact some of the hybrids that we have looked at
may not even need spraying because the
amount of gray leaf spot and diseases in general
is low, especially if farmers rotates every
other year to soybeans or other crops. This is
really good and it really pays big dividends.
“Where you get into trouble, and the price of
these commodities plays a big role in what a
farmer does, is when you raise beans after
beans or corn after corn,” he said. “In those
cases you’ll find more disease buildup where
you have monocropping systems.”
Newman suggests that farmers look to see if
they can justify putting on a foliar fungicide.
Timing is important, good coverage is important,
and paying attention to diseases, especially
late season diseases, is really important
too.
“At the prices of the commodities today, if a
farmer can save two or three bushels per acre
it’s money in his pocket,” he said. “So farmers
need to pay close attention not only to their
weed and insect problems, but disease problems
too. That is what we are concentrating on
here in Dyersburg.”
To sum it up Newman recommends that farmers
rotate their crops, use foliar fungicides as
needed, and be on the alert for fungicide resistant
frogeye in their soybeans.
“If you’re not getting good control with your
strobilurins, you may want to go for a resistant
variety or use a different class of fungicides,
mainly the triazols. Triazols are not quite as
good for control of frogeye as strobilurins; but
in the face of fungicide resistance, it might pay
you to go to a triazol type fungicide. That would
really be our take home message today.”
Producers also can go to the website <utcrops.
com> and scan the different data there,
not only from Tennessee but from other areas
too on cotton, corn, soybeans and wheat.
There’s a lot of research there including Newman’s
own research. Farmers can find resistant
varieties to various diseases listed there. Δ
BETTY VALLE GEGG-NAEGER: Senior Staff
Writer, MidAmerica Farmer Grower
Dr. Melvin Newman,
Professor of Entomology
and Plant Pathology,
University of Tennessee
Extension Service,
gives his advice
on disease control
in corn and soybean.
Photo by John LaRose, Jr.