Should I Reduce Residue To Reduce Disease?
URBANA, ILL.
Question: “Farmer’s seem really tired of
fighting foliar diseases in corn. Would
plowing everything under solve the problem?”
The presence of some foliar corn diseases is
partially explained by the presence of “residue.”
However, that increase is not completely explained
by the presence of residue and for some
diseases the presence of residue does not even
factor into the appearance of disease. This
makes a hypothetical “plowing it all under” tenuous
at best.
Some foliar diseases overwinter somewhere
other than residue. Southern Rust and common
rust overwinter in the southern part of North
America. Maize Chlorotic Dwarf Virus and
Maize Dwarf Virus pass from the fall to the
spring within grass weeds (Johnsongrass, in
particular). Stewart’s Wilt overwinters within
the gut of corn flea beetles. Sorghum Downy
Mildew overwinters in the soil. Other foliar corn
diseases overwinter in residue “plus” another location.
Common smut, Crazy Top, and Physoderma
all winter in residue, but they also
persist in the soil. These two categories of foliar
corn disease (those that overwinter somewhere
other than residue and those that overwinter in
residue and the soil) will not be influenced by
variations in tillage. One can destroy all the
residue they want, but these diseases “tough it
out” somewhere else. This stands in contrast to
diseases like Northern Corn Leaf Blight and
Gray Leaf Spot that do primarily overwinter in
residue.
Growers should also remember that “plowing
it all under” brings some potentially devastating
consequences. First, eliminating residue can
saddle the grower with substantial input costs.
One need look no further than U of I Machinery
Cost Estimates to find evidence of such costs.
Moldboard plowing (the best way to eliminate a
lot of residue) is the most expensive option on
that sheet. In fact, it surpasses the next most
expensive tillage technique (mulch tillage) by
roughly $10 per acre. Second, producers don’t
“plow it under” because eliminating residue
might eventually saddle the agricultural industry
with painful consequences. Phosphorus typically
passes into surface water as high velocity
water drags phosphorus-laden soil from the
field. Residue slows down that velocity and decreases
erosive soil loss that contributes to
phosphorus-derived water quality issues. “Plow
it all under” would quickly translate into nutrient
regulation. In other words, "plowing it all
under" would cost growers too much, both individually
and corporately.
Could other residue reduction methods solve
the problem? Some have proposed the application
of fall nitrogen to more rapidly degrade
residue. The jury is still out on the true effectiveness
of this approach, and many wonder if
enough residue could really be eliminated prefreeze
to reduce disease? A lower cost, more reliable,
and less potentially troublesome method
by which to reduce residue would be crop rotation.
Rotation, less popular than it once was,
would allow corn residue to decay over the
course of a season, it would move the field away
from host plant material, and it would decrease
the amount of material available to overwinter
pathogens going into the next corn-growing season.
Would “plowing it all under” eliminate the
“real” disease problem? Residue has allowed inoculum
to build in corn fields over time, but the
presence of disease causing pathogens means
nothing unless a susceptible host is present.
When one considers the recent rise of once obscure
corn diseases (Northern Corn Leaf Blight,
Goss’s Wilt, Diplodia, Etc.), one is forced to wonder
about the industry’s recent disease vigilance.
Our love for certain hybrids to the
exclusion of all others has probably allowed
some pathogens to find a niche in which they
can reside. The 2005 Field Guide to Corn Diseases
notes another potential explanation. That
resource states the problem as follows…”In recent
years, Gray Leaf Spot, Northern Corn Leaf
Blight, and Diplodia Ear Rot have become problems
because many elite hybrid germplasm
pools” (the stuff from which our hybrids are derived)
struggle with “resistance to…these diseases.”
Yes, residue does provide an
overwintering site for some foliar corn diseases,
but many of these diseases have reappeared because
we have a little work to do on the resistance
front. Δ