Corn Fungicide Resistance
Farmers Should Prepare To Face Fungicide Resistance In Corn
PRINCETON, KY.
Fungicide resistance will almost certainly
happen in corn, and while it’s not going to
be disastrous, farmers should prepare to
counter attack it, according to Dr. Paul Vincelli,
plant pathologist at the University of Kentucky,
“You can reduce the risk to yourself and your
neighbors by just being very careful to use
fungicides where they can be well-justified,” he
said. “I really don’t have to waffle here on this,
the eventual development of fungicide resistance
in corn is almost a certainty. What we
don’t know is when or where.”
Vincelli doesn’t expect that resistance to fungicides
in corn will create widespread problems or
a catastrophic crop effect. However, he said all
the ingredients are in place for fungicide resistance
in corn, and biology predicts that it will
happen in time, whether it’s this year, next year,
or sometime in the future.
One of the reasons for his prediction is the
simple fact that fungicides are being used. For
fungicides known to have a resistance risk, the
concept is simple: Applying the fungicide kills
those fungal spores that are sensitive to it, leaving
only the spores that are resistant to the fungicide.
“That’s good, that’s what you want,” he said.
“You want to kill the sensitive spores so that
you can get the disease control. But if there is a
resistant spore in your field, and that is the big
if, then of course it will survive the application;
and the next time the fungus becomes active, if
weather permits it to become active, those resistant
spores now have a
chance to build. So, over
time the use of the fungicide
selects for the resistant
individuals, allowing
them to grow and prosper.”
What no one really
knows is where those resistant
spores are. Are
they in Caldwell County,
are they in Daviess County, or are they in your
field, but not your neighbors? Wherever they
are, the use of fungicide will select them to be
the only survivors, and in time you’ll learn you
have a failure when the population is 100 percent
resistant.
Therefore, one ingredient promoting resistance
is selection. When farmers use fungicides,
that automatically creates “selection pressure”
— killing off the sensitive spores and leaving the
resistant ones.
“Number two, the very best fungicides in corn
are also highly prone to resistance,” Vincelli
said. “The very best fungicides are the strobilurin
fungicides, such as Quadris and Headline.
Quilt and Stratego also include a strobilurin
fungicide as do other products as well. Those
are really good fungicides, that’s why growers
use them, but they’re also known world-wide to
be highly prone to a high level of resistance. So
we know we can expect to have resistance to
strobilurins in corn diseases, we just hope we
can delay that by 10 or 20 years, but we expect
resistance to develop in time.”
A third ingredient promoting resistance is the
type of fungi now that farmers try to control in
corn. One of those is Cercospora zeae-maydis,
or the grey leaf spot fungus.
“We know world-wide that Cercosporas are
adaptable to fungicides,” he said. “There are lots
of examples of Cercospora fungi adapting to
fungicides, developing resistance. Unless the
grey leaf fungus is somehow different from its
sister species, we expect it to develop resistance
in time. Maybe it already is developing, maybe
we’re already selecting for resistance in our
fields and we just don’t know it yet. Cercospora
fungi are genetically adaptable to fungicides.”
A fourth point is farmers are using fungicides
to control southern rust, which is a disease of
corn that usually doesn’t cause problems in
Kentucky, but can show up especially in late
planted corn. Southern rust is also somewhat
adaptable to fungicides, but whether it can do
so against strobilurin fungicides is unclear.
“Southern rust disease blows north every
year, it doesn’t survive the winters in Kentucky,”
Vincelli said. “It survives in Mexico and
then it blows into Georgia, for example. They
have a lot of southern rust problems there in
the corn and so, logically they spray. Sometimes
they even spray twice to control southern rust.
Growers in the South may be selecting for resistance
in southern rust. If so, those spores
from the South will blow into states like Kentucky.
If resistant spores arrive here, you’re
going to spray a strobilurin and you’re not going
to get any rust control whatsoever.
“So we have all four ingredients,” he continued.
“We’ve got selection going on with fungicides
being used, high risk fungicides for
resistance, the strobilurins; we have grey leaf
spot, a genus that’s adaptable to fungicides,
and southern corn rust is also somewhat adaptable;
and growers in the South are using the
fungicides and possibly selecting for resistance.
Hopefully the process will be slow, but we just
don’t know. We won’t know until it happens.”
Vincelli’s main recommendation to curb resistance
is to use fungicides as judiciously, as
carefully, as minimally as possible. It is absolutely
fundamental biology that the more you
use fungicides the more selection pressure you
put on the spores, and the faster you will build
the resistance.
Farmers can hope there isn’t a resistant spore
in their field; but if there is, they won’t know it,
and they will be selecting for it by using fungicides.
“So the principle management recommendation
we make on all crops worldwide is for fungicide
users: Use the fungicide as minimally as
you feel you can, agronomically,” he said.
“That’s one; a second is use mixtures. The mixture
helps because you are using fungicides
from different fungicide families, like a strobilurin
plus maybe a triazole type fungicide. That
way, you now have two weapons instead of one.
So even if a resistant spore survives the strobilurin
in the mixture, the triazole will have contacted
that spore and will kill it.”
By using mixtures instead of solo active ingredients
you will slow the buildup of resistance.
That’s pretty fundamentally solid biology
in all crops.
“So that’s really another option,” he added.
“One is use fungicides minimally and to use
them in combination, in mixtures with different
families of active ingredients. That’s pretty easy
to do in corn because if you buy a premix,
they’re going to contain different active ingredients
in different families of fungicides.”
A third point discussed in the farming community
is to use the high label rates. The idea
is, if you use the high label rates you’re going
to, theoretically at least, slow down or prevent
resistance to fungicide.
“The reality is that’s a good idea, but it’s almost
certain not to work for strobilurins,” Vincelli
said. “Strobilurin fungicide resistance,
when it happens, is almost always a very high
level of resistance. In other words you could
spray a hundred times the labeled rate, of
course you’d be violating the law, and in addition
you’d be spending a hundred times what
the product costs, you’d be painting your fields
white with fungicide and it still wouldn’t control
the resistant strains. The nature of resistance
to strobilurins typically is extremely high levels
of resistance when it develops. Suddenly, the
fungus is tolerant to extremely high levels, so
using the high label rate is almost always not
going to work with strobilurins so I don’t think
that’s really a solution that we can count on in
corn.”
Vincelli showed a slide of several petri dishes
with varying amounts of fungicide applied. One
petri dish held no chemical, and others had
chemical values of 31, 63 and 125 parts per million.
The dishes demonstrated that in the absence
of fungicide the zero part per million dish shows
the sensitive strain grows very well, all the way
to the end of the plate. The resistant strain also
grows very well, all the way to the end of the
plate. So, in the absence of fungicide, they’ve
both grown very well.
“However, with fungicide the sensitive strain
is suppressed completely, even at 31 parts per
million. The fungus is not growing in these petri
dishes containing fungicide. The sensitive strain
is absolutely shut down with these moderately
high to high doses of fungicide. The resistant
strain, at the same dose, is growing beautifully;
as a matter of fact, sometimes fungi grow even
faster if they’re resistant. The fungicide actually
stimulates them for reasons that are quite complex
and not always understood.
“So, in other words, what this shows is qualitative
resistance. There is no dose that a grower
could apply legally or practically or economically
that will stop the fungus; so this represents the
kind of resistance we get from strobilurin fungicides.
Once we have a resistant strain out there,
forget it, you can’t use the strobilurin fungicides
to control it. Whether you use high rates, low
rates, middle rates, illegal rates, you can’t control
it.” Δ
BETTY VALLE GEGG-NAEGER: Senior Staff
Writer, MidAmerica Farmer Grower
Dr. Paul Vincelli, plant pathologist
at the University of Kentucky,
holds a slide that illustrates two
different strains of the same
fungus in petri dishes. Both are
the same fungus but one is
resistant and one is sensitive to
the fungicide being used.
Photo by John LaRose, Jr.