Timing of fungicide application against Cercospora leaf spot disease based on aerial spore dispersal of Cercospora beticola in sugar beet

2023 | journal article. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

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​Timing of fungicide application against Cercospora leaf spot disease based on aerial spore dispersal of Cercospora beticola in sugar beet​
Liebe, S.; Imbusch, F.; Erven, T. & Varrelmann, M.​ (2023) 
Journal of Plant Diseases and Protection,.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s41348-023-00708-w 

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Authors
Liebe, Sebastian; Imbusch, Frederike; Erven, Tobias; Varrelmann, Mark
Abstract
Abstract Cercospora leaf spot is an important foliar disease in sugar beet caused by Cercospora beticola . Tolerant cultivars are available, but application of fungicides is still mandatory for disease control. The timing of the fungicide application is crucial as it determines the outcome of disease epidemiology. A disease incidence (DI) of 5% is widely used as a threshold for fungicide application. Recently a method was developed that allows the quantification of aerial spore dispersal of C . beticola for measuring spore flight intensity. It was aimed in this study to prove if fungicide application based on spore flight might improve disease control compared to DI. In a field trial with artificial inoculation, a single fungicide application at the onset of spore flight slowed down disease development as indicated by reduced disease severity and aerial spore dispersal. However, it did not provide sufficient control in terms of sugar yield. Only a second fungicide application based on spore flight detection achieved an efficacy similar to two fungicide applications based on DI. In contrast, a single fungicide application based either on spore flight or DI was sufficient in two on-farm trials under natural infection with moderate disease pressure. This highlights the necessity of an early timed first fungicide application followed by a second application under high disease pressure induced by artificial inoculation. Although fungicide application based on spore flight achieved sufficient control success in on-farm trials, it seems not to improve disease control compared to the usage of DI as threshold.
Issue Date
2023
Journal
Journal of Plant Diseases and Protection 
ISSN
1861-3829
eISSN
1861-3837
Language
English
Sponsor
BASF http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100004349
Georg-August-Universität Göttingen 501100003385

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