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Cotton Blue Disease Pathogen Overwintered in Alabama

Cotton Blue Disease Pathogen Overwintered in Alabama
Alabama Cooperative Extension System plant pathologists and crops specialists have already confirmed Cotton leaf roll dwarf virus (Cotton Blue Disease or CLRDV-AL) in Alabama. The disease—spread by aphids— damaged cotton in 2018 in Alabama counties bordering the Florida Panhandle.
 
Alabama Extension professionals are working alongside their Georgia counterparts to issue guidelines and recommendations to help manage the disease as producers move closer to spring planting.
 
Henbit a Likely Host
 
Dr. Austin Hagan, an Alabama Extension plant pathologist, said henbit, a common winter weed, has tested positive for CLRDV-AL, and is a likely host.
 
“It is likely that other winter annual or perennial weeds will test positive for the virus over the next few months,” Hagan said. “Alabama cotton producers, particularly in counties along the Panhandle, should accelerate their winter weed control program in any remaining fields where cotton or peanuts will be grown in 2019.”
 
Hagan said researchers in Alabama and Georgia are sampling winter weeds and some perennials to be tested for the virus. Many no-till and reduced-till fields have already been sprayed for winter weeds. Experts are advising a burn-down herbicide application to kill winter weeds.
 
“This is mainly a precaution, which may interfere with the early-season survival and movement of the virus,” he said. “Of course, if there is no aphid, there is no virus spread.”
 
Cotton Stalks
 
Live cotton stalks continue to test positive and are possible hosts for CLRDV-AL. The virus was detected in cotton stalks collected in December and January in Baldwin, Dale, Geneva and Macon Counties.
 
“Dead cotton stalks are not a virus source,” Hagan said. “With the notable exception of extreme southern counties (Baldwin, Covington, Escambia, Geneva, Houston and Mobile), stalks are likely dead or will die soon—particularly those bush hogged close to the surface.”
 
Diseased cotton stalks will only serve as a virus source if developing lateral shoots and leaves are infested with the cotton aphid, which could migrate and transmit the virus to a bridge host or early cotton.
 
Without the cotton aphid, no virus transmission from overwintering or bridge hosts occurs.
 
Even if cotton is not sprouting, stalk destruction is still advised. Hagan said ideally, cotton stalks should be killed soon with a stalk puller, bush hog, other tillage equipment or herbicides.
 
“Again, the value of stalk destruction for suppressing cotton diseases is not confirmed with research data, and will not be for several years,” Hagan said. “Producers should also note that widespread CLRDV-AL development occurred statewide in 2018 despite a hard January freeze that should have killed every cotton stalk all the way down to the Gulf of Mexico.”
 
Sanitation practices such as destroying a potential inoculum source like live cotton stalks and weed hosts, is commonly recommended for reducing the risk of diseases—particularly hard to control viruses—from spreading into subsequent cash crops.
 
Outbreak Prevention
 
Hagan said there are still no “hard and fast” guidelines for preventing another outbreak of CLRDV-AL in Alabama cotton.
 
Distribution of this disease in Alabama has been established, along with the identification of possible survival sites and winter weed hosts. In 2018, Blue Disease incidence and severity was noticeably greater in late-planted cotton as opposed to early-planted cotton. The severe stunting in juvenile cotton associated with Blue Disease in Brazil was not observed in affected Alabama cotton in 2018.
 
As a result of mild winter weather and possible overwintering, Hagan said it is possible that disease onset may occur earlier in 2019 than in 2018.
 

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