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Mid-Season Update On Fungicides And Corn Diseases

By Daren Mueller, Department of Plant Pathology and Microbiology and Alison Robertson, Ph.D., Plant Pathology and Microbiology

We continue to receive several questions about Northern corn leaf blight, Goss’s wilt and fungicides. Here is some additional information.



Basics of fungicides

Parts of rural Iowa are abuzz about fungicide use to manage some emerging diseases, and we have received several questions about the basics of fungicides. A quick reminder, APS PRESS recently published a book geared towards farmers and agronomists on the basics of fungicides. It is available in print, Kindle version, and online through the Plant Management Network. The Plant Management Network also has several webinars on fungicide use for managing leaf diseases on corn and soybean. Note: membership may be required to access some information on Plant Management Network.

Is there a threshold for Northern corn leaf blight (or other diseases for that matter)?

No. Although research attempts have been made to establish a threshold, they have not been successful likely because the disease triangle drives disease development and even the best pathologist has little say in weather conditions. Nevertheless, here is a stab at how we may approach deciding on spraying a fungicide:

1. Scout from your office

  • Check past, current and future weather patterns. More rain = more disease and temperatures in the mid 70s-80s favor most pathogens
  • Check relevant newsletters (or Twitter, blogs, etc.) from Extension, seed companies, etc. Find tweets, articles on diseases that are showing up. (e.g., Northern corn leaf blight article earlier this week; Twitter @dsmuelle or @alisonrISU)
  • Check susceptibility of hybrid/cultivar in seed company literature.

2. If the above three bullet points indicate a risk of disease, scout at-risk fields. It is important to look in many different places across the entire field since the environment may differ across the field, e.g. river bottom to the crest of a hill.

3. If you find ANY of foliar fungal diseases (e.g., gray leaf spot, northern corn leaf blight, northern corn leaf spot, southern rust on corn; frogeye leaf spot, soybean rust on soybean) in these at risk fields, spray. Make sure to properly identify the disease. You don’t want to be spraying a field with Goss’s wilt with a fungicide.

4. If you have a “resistant” hybrid and disease is showing up, collect some leaves and send them to the Plant and Insect Diagnostic Clinic (ATTN: Alison Robertson and Daren Mueller). If it is NCLB you should probably consider a fungicide application because it could be a race that defeats the resistance gene in that hybrid. If it is gray leaf spot, a fungicide application is probably NOT necessary on resistant hybrid. Gray leaf spot lesions on resistant hybrids tend to be smaller and develop slower than those on more susceptible hybrids.

5. If there is no disease, consider delaying spraying one week until you scout field again. If no disease occurs by brown silk for corn or middle of pod fill for soybean, chances of a return on your investment (ROI) for a fungicide application are not as good.

Other considerations when deciding to apply fungicides:

  • Research done by several pathologists across the Midwest suggests that ROI is more likely when conditions are favorable for disease.
  • Resistance to strobilurin fungicides has been reported in the fungi that cause frogeye leaf spot, and Cercospora leaf blight in several states. Although no resistance has been reported in Iowa or in corn pathogens across the Midwest, we continue to monitor fields.

Source : iastate.edu


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