Spring barley growers may need to apply an early fungicide spray to counter increased net blotch pressure. That is according to ProCam agronomist Alistair Gordon, who warns that early drilled crops and those using untreated or farm saved seed will be at a higher than usual risk of infection.
“Net blotch has rapidly become one of the hardest diseases to control in spring barley, not least because crops can easily become infected either via seedborne or trashborne sources of inoculum,” Alistair explains.
“The added complication of disease resistance – which has reduced the efficacy of several fungicide active ingredients – means it’s no longer possible to cure infections once they have taken hold. Prevention is therefore crucial to ensure crops remain as clean as possible for as long as possible.”
With variety resistance or applying an appropriate seed treatment useful control options Alistair believes untreated, farm-saved could prove to be a ticking timebomb later in the season.
Alistair’s advice is therefore to apply an early season fungicide treatment to provide crops with an extra layer of disease protection before infections explode.
“In a ‘normal’ year, or in a low disease pressure scenario, it might be feasible to wait until the traditional T1 timing to apply a first fungicide treatment,” Alistair says. “Unfortunately, that approach won’t cut the mustard this year as we’re already hearing reports that a significant volume of seed has been confirmed to have very high levels of net blotch. Where untreated seed has been drilled, or where drilling was brought forward to make the most of the recent dry conditions, the risk will be even greater.
“The advice this year is therefore to bring crop protection plans forward by applying a suitable fungicide treatment as soon as possible.”
Alistair recommends that growers should be on the lookout for symptoms of net blotch (brown stripes of infection spreading from the base of leaves in seedlings) ahead of the first tiller stage (GS21).
“Most growers will already be planning to apply weed control and trace elements at this timing, so it makes sense to use the opportunity to apply a fungicide to knock back any infection that has travelled up from the seed or which has been transmitted into the emerging plant from infected trash.”
In terms of which active ingredients to apply at this early timing, Alistair explains that growers need to choose carefully to ensure the selected treatment is effective.
“A rapidly developing resistance issue has made several azoles and SDHI fungicides less effective than they used to be,” he explains. “It is therefore important to protect key actives such as prothioconazole, adepydin and fluopyram by using them in conjunction with another mode of action.
“The best option is to include a strobilurin but even some active ingredients in this fungicide group – such as fluoxastrobin and azoxystrobin – have been impacted by resistant isolates.
“Thankfully, pyraclostrobin and trifloxystrobin have so far remained unaffected by any disease mutations, with products such as Mobius (prothioconazole + trifloxystrobin) and Comet 200 (pyraclostrobin) being useful options,” he concludes