Mr. Fernandez et al., Tillage and summerfallow effects on leaf spot diseases of wheat in the semiarid Canadian Prairies, CAN J PL P, 20(4), 1998, pp. 376-379
Citations number
19
Categorie Soggetti
Plant Sciences
Journal title
CANADIAN JOURNAL OF PLANT PATHOLOGY-REVUE CANADIENNE DE PHYTOPATHOLOGIE
A field study was conducted in the semiarid area of the western Canadian pr
airies to determine the effects of summerfallow and tillage practices on le
af spotting diseases of spring wheat. Pyrenophora tritici-repentis (tan spo
t) was the most common leaf spotting pathogen. Disease severity was greater
in wheat grown after fallow than in continuous wheat, either when these sy
stems were managed using cultivator-tillage or zero-till methods, but was s
imilar in all three tillage methods: cultivator-, reduced-, and zero-till.
The density of fungal infective structures was greater in 2-year old residu
es than in residues from the previous growing season. Most of the residues
in the continuous wheat system were from the previous crop. The apparent lo
wer amount of initial inoculum available in a continuous wheat system than
in wheat grown after fallow would explain the higher leaf spotting severity
in the latter system. Also, lower levels of infective structures on wheat
residues were found in wheat after zero-till fallow than after cultivator f
allow, which may be attributed to an inhibitory effect of glyphosate on fun
gal development. However, similar disease levels in cultivator- and zero-ti
llage treatments suggests that the more favorable microclimate for disease
development in the latter system might have compensated for the lower amoun
ts of residue-borne inoculum.