Ag Tips from JJ: May 15

Brought to you by: Jonah T. Johnson, MS, CPAg, CCA - Sales Agronomist, PCT | Sunrise





May 15, 2019: Where’s your wheat growth stage at? Some parts of Ohio are heading and will be pollinating soon. Be on the look out for foliar disease and FHB!
F.H.B.

Fusarium head blight (F.H.B.), commonly referred as wheat “head scab,” is a common disease we can face every year, all dependent on the environmental conditions. 

 

Wheat in the southern part of Ohio is approaching heading or just headed, which means that flowering will start within 4-5 days, depending on temperature (heads produce small yellow anthers).

AgTips_05-15_01.png

Vomitoxin (DON) can accumulate in the absence of significant visual symptoms. Because pink or lightweight, FHB-infected kernels can be cleaned at the elevator, but plump, healthy kernels containing DON cannot. This reduces the overall quality of the grain and ultimately, grower profits in the long run.

 

In order to understand how to manage DON, you need to realize that FHB is a fungus that overwinters not only on wheat residue, but also corn (and to a lesser extent soybean) residue.  When conditions are wet and warm during the flowering period, FHB infections are most severe. Experience indicates that if sufficient rain falls and cool temperatures occur, FHB outbreaks are still a possibility. The wet conditions “wake up” the fungus, and it starts to produce spores and spore bearing structures on residue.  These spores can be rain dispersed locally or forcibly ejected.  The latter spores can travel several miles and settle onto heads via atmospheric deposition during calm nighttime periods.  When spores land on heads that are flowering, they germinate and infect wheat heads. The fungus can  infect individual spikelets and or the rachis (the stem where the spikelets attach). 

AgTips_05-15_02.png

 

Colonization of the rachis can impede movement of water and nutrients and result in dry or bleached heads above the point of infection. 

AgTips_05-15_03.png

You may see an orange to pink growth on infected spikelets (Figure 2).  DON can be produced by the fungus after infection, typically following alternating wet and dry periods before harvest.

 

During the season FHB can be SUPPRESSED by making an application of either Caramba, Miravis Ace, Prosaro, or Proline from the start of flowering (Feekes FGS 10.5.1, when approx 50% of MAIN tillers have started to flower) through six days after this point in time

 

Replicated university trials, including Ohio State University, still confirm that this is the best application window to target for FHB and DON suppression, regardless of product. 

 

Click here to visit the Fusarium Head Blight Prediction Center to help you decide if a fungicide application for suppression of FHB is warranted.

 

The combination of a moderately resistant variety and a well-timed FHB fungicide application can reduce FHB by over 70% on average.

 

It has been wet, but cool and most of the crop has yet to reach the critical time for FHB infection.  Continue to monitor the FHB prediction center as your wheat approaches flowering to determine if fungicide applications are needed in your fields this season.

 

Additional References:

The Ohio State University - Ohio Field Crop Disease Page

 The University of Illinois Field Crop Disease Blog