| UNIFORM FUNGICIDE RESULTS ON SPRING
WHEAT, ND, 2000
Marcia McMullen1, Blaine
Schatz2 and John Lukach3
1 NDSU Extension Service,
Fargo; 2 Carrington Research and Extension Center; 3 Langdon
Research and Extension Center
A core set of
seven fungicide treatments were evaluated on hard red spring wheat for efficacy against
Fusarium head blight (FHB = scab) and leaf diseases at three locations in North Dakota in
2000. The evaluation of the fungicide
treatments was part of a national effort to evaluate a uniform set of treatments across
multiple states and environments. The
core set of treatments included Folicur, Tilt, Stratego, BAS 500, BAS 500 + Folicur, and
Quadris + Benlate. Folicur (tebuconazole) had a Section 18 for use in ND in 2000. Tilt (propiconazole) has a state label for heading
application on wheat in ND. Quadris
(azoxystrobin) is registered for wheat in ND. Stratego
is a combination product of Tilt + trifloxystrobin (Flint) and recently received a federal
label for wheat. BAS 500 is a strobilurin
fungicide and is not yet labeled for wheat in the US.
An additional fungicide, Caramba (metconazole), was included in the
evaluations in ND. Metconazole is not labeled
in the US and this was the first year of testing of this product.
The fungicide
treatments were applied to Russ hard red spring wheat at Fargo and Carrington and to
Grandin hard red spring wheat at Fargo and Langdon. Treatments
were applied at early flowering. Fusarium
head blight and leaf disease ratings were recorded at soft dough stage of kernel
development. Fungicide treatments were
applied at 35-40 psi in 17-18 gpa, using flat fan nozzles oriented forward/backward. Fusarium inoculum was added in the form of
inoculated grain kernels to the plots in Fargo and Langdon.
Plots were mist irrigated at Fargo and Langdon, while sprinkler irrigation
was used at Carrington. Disease levels were
high at all three locations. Results of
fungicide effects on disease and yield parameters are given in Table 1.
Table 1. Effect of fungicide treatments on Fusarium head
blight (FHB) and leaf diseases of spring wheat, ND, 2000 (averaged over 4 trials at 3 locations)
Treatment |
Product rate/acre |
Flag Leaf
Disease
% |
FHB Field
Severity*
% |
DON**
ppm |
Yield
bu/acre |
Test Wt.
lb/bu |
Untreated ck |
|
48.4 |
26.0 |
10.1 |
38.5 |
57.3 |
Folicur |
4 fl oz + 0.06% Induce |
18.2 |
8.3 |
6.2 |
49.5 |
58.9 |
Tilt |
4 fl oz + 0.06% Induce |
22.9 |
11.7 |
6.5 |
45.4 |
58.5 |
Stratego |
14 fl oz + 0.06% Induce |
19.0 |
11.0 |
6.4 |
47.0 |
59.0 |
BAS 500F |
12.3 fl oz + 1.0% Agridex |
7.9 |
6.3 |
6.2 |
48.4 |
59.6 |
BAS 500F+ Folicur |
6.2 fl oz + 2.0 fl oz + 1% v/v
Agridex |
10.1 |
7.6 |
7.5 |
50.7 |
59.3 |
Quadris + Benlate |
9.2 fl oz + 0.25 lb |
15.2 |
8.7 |
6.7 |
50.9 |
59.3 |
Caramba |
13.5 fl oz |
13.1 |
3.9 |
2.9 |
53.7 |
59.5 |
|
LSD P = 0.05 |
17.7 |
6.0 |
2.7 |
4.2 |
0.9 |
* FHB field severity =
incidence (% tillers with scab symptoms) x head severity
** DON levels in the
untreated check were 5.4 and 10.4 ppm at Fargo, 6.1 at Carrington, and 18.4 at Langdon
Uniform
fungicide results on spring wheat, cont.
Compared to the untreated check, all fungicide
treatments significantly reduced leaf disease, FHB field severity, and DON levels, and
significantly increased yield and test weight across locations. Among fungicide treatments, significant
differences were not observed for leaf disease, but BAS 500F and BAS 500 F + Folicur
resulted in the lowest leaf disease ratings. Caramba
gave the lowest FHB field severity and DON levels, and was significantly lower for these
disease scores than some of the treatments. All
fungicide treatments resulted in significant yield increases over the untreated check,
ranging from 6.9 bu to 15.2 bu/acre. Some
significant differences among treatments were observed for yield and test weight. The Caramba treatment had significantly higher
yield than several treatments. The BAS 500 had a significantly higher test weight than the
Tilt treatment. Yield and quality responses
with fungicide treatments were economic in these tests in 2000. |