Volume
3 Issue 4
June
13, 2006
Ground
Application of Fungicide for the
Suppression of Fusarium Head Blight
The North Dakota State University Extension Service has
a new publication to help small-grain producers fight
Fusarium Head Blight.
The publication, “Ground Application of Fungicide for
the Suppression of Fusarium Head Blight,” describes the
latest research and includes recommendations on the most
effective application techniques.
It also has a section on adapting spray nozzles to
provide the proper fungicide spray pattern.
Fusarium head blight, also known as scab, is a disease
that can occur on all small-grain crops, but is most
common in our region on spring wheat, durum and barley. It
develops when wet weather occurs during the crops’ heading
and flowering stages.
U.S. wheat and barley producers have lost more than $3
billion to scab outbreaks since 1990, according to U.S.
Department of Agriculture estimates.
The traditional methods of applying fungicides for leaf
disease control don’t work on scab, according to Vern
Hofman, a retired NDSU Extension agricultural engineer and
one of the publication’s authors. He says the most
effective control is to apply fungicide to the grain head.
The publication’s other authors are Marcia McMullen,
NDSU Extension plant pathologist; Scott Halley, crop
protection scientist at NDSU’s Langdon Research Extension
Center; Gary Van Ee, agricultural engineer at Michigan
State University, East Lansing; Marty Draper, Extension
plant pathologist at South Dakota State University,
Brookings; and Charla Hollingsworth, Extension plant
pathologist at the University of Minnesota, Crookston.
The publication can be found on the Web
at:
http://www.ag.ndsu.edu/pubs/ageng/machine/ae1314w.htm
It also can be ordered through the NDSU Agriculture
Communication Distribution Center at (701) 231-7882 or
dctr@ndsuext.nodak.edu. One publication will be free of
charge. Orders of several copies will cost 25 cents per
copy plus postage.
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