Some Principles Of Fungicide Resistance II: Increased Crop Disease Pressure Increases Risk
LEXINGTON, KY.
This is the second in a series of articles
on fungicide resistance.
The title summarizes the
present article perfectly:
higher disease pressure
means higher risk of fungicide
resistance. Figures 1-2 help in
understanding why this is so.
Field 1 (represented by Figure 1) has approximately
twice the spore numbers as Field 2.
Clearly, Field 1 has higher disease pressure.
You can also see that Field 1 has two resistant
spores, rather than one.
If you count them up, you will find that the
percentage of spores with resistance is slightly
over 1 percent in both fields. That is to say, the
mutation rate is the same in both fields, which
is what we expect to find in nature. However,
because of the higher disease pressure, Field 1
has approximately twice the overall spore population
as Field 2. Thus, no matter what the
mutation rate is, twice as many resistant spores
will show up in Field 1 than in Field 2, because
the overall spore population is twice as high.
So does this really matter? After all, resistant
spores emerged in both fields. The answer is,
“Yes, it matters”, because resistance development
is a matter of risk. Not all mutant spores
that show up in a field will go on to cause disease.
Some fall to the ground and never have a
chance to infect a plant. Others may land on a
plant but not be exposed to enough wetness to
infect. Still others may infect but fall victim to
plant defenses. So the higher number of resistant
spores in Field 1 does definitely represent a
higher risk for the producer, especially when
one considers that billions of fungal spores can
easily present in an acre of crop.
So, what do es this mean for a producer? It
means that, the more we depend on at-risk
fungicides for disease control, the more pressure
we are putting on the fungus to develop
fungicide resistance. If it is possible to use others
practices to reduce disease pressure, we reduce
the overall risk of resistance. Anything
that reduces disease pressure reduces the size
of the spore population. And as Figures 1-2
show, reducing the spore population reduces
the chance that a resistant mutant will occur in
our fields.
This guideline applies to all practices that
contribute to disease control: Sanitation, crop
rotation, varieties with partial resistance, etc.,
etc. Anything we do to reduce disease pressure,
reduces the risk.
Bottom line: The best way to protect the utility
of fungicides is by not over-relying on them.
Δ
DR. PAUL VINCELLI: Extension Professor and
Provost’s Distinguished Service Professor, University
of Kentucky
Figure 5. Initial step in fungicide resistance development: Occurrence
of mutant spores with resistance to the fungicide (filled
circles). Note that there are two resistant spores in this imaginary
crop field.
Figure 6. Imagine that this a second crop field, where the population
of infectious spores is about half that of Figure 1. Only one
mutant spore with resistance has occurred, instead of the two mutants
that emerged in Field 1. See text for explanation.