Title: Diagnosis and Management of Turfgrass Diseases
1Diagnosis and Management of Turfgrass Diseases
- Lane Tredway
- Advanced Turfgrass Pest Management
- Lecture 2, Spring 2003
2Disease Triangle
3Diagnosis Triangle
MICROCLIMATE, RECENT WEATHER, RECENT CULTURAL
PRACTICES
PLANT AND STAND SYMTPOMS
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS OF PATHOGEN
4Stand SymptomsSymptoms evident from a distance
- Spots less than 4 diameter
- Patches irregularly shaped areas greater than
4 diameter - Circles perfectly circular areas greater than
4 diameter - Rings surrounded by healthy turf to the inside
and outside - Irregular no pattern
5DOLLAR SPOT
SPOT
6COPPER SPOT
SPOT
7LARGE PATCH
PATCH
8CIRCLE
GRAY SNOW MOLD
9SUMMER PATCH
RING
10SUMMER PATCH
RING
11RUST
NO PATTERN
12Plant SymptomsSymptoms evident on individual
plants
- Leaf Spot round or oval areas on leaves with a
distinct border - Foliar Lesions large, irregular areas on leaves
with a distinct border - Stem Lesions large, irregular areas on leaf
sheaths with a distinct border - Foliar blight or dieback necrosis of leaves or
entire tillers - Crown Rot necrosis of the crown, rhizomes, or
stolons - Root Rot necrosis of the roots
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14GRAY LEAF SPOT
LEAF SPOT
15BROWN PATCH
LESION
16LARGE PATCH
STEM LESIONS
17BROWN BLIGHT
FOLIAR BLIGHT
18NECROTIC RING SPOT
CROWN ROT
19SUMMER PATCH
ROOT ROT
20Pathogen SignsEvidence of Pathogen Growth
- Mycelium weblike masses of fungal growth
- Spore Masses fuzzy or gelatinous growth
- Fruiting Bodies spore producing structures
- Sclerotia small, round or thread-like survival
structures - Mushrooms reproductive structures produced by
fairy ring fungi
21PYTHIUM BLIGHT
MYCELIUM
22BROWN PATCH
SMOKE RING
23COPPER SPOT
SPORE MASSES
24ANTHRACNOSE
FRUITING BODIES
25SLIME MOLD
FRUTING BODIES
26RED THREAD
SCLEROTIA
27SOUTHERN BLIGHT
SCLEROTIA
28FAIRY RING
MUSHROOMS
29Microclimate and Recent WeatherDiseases are
strongly influenced by environmental conditions
- Microclimate
- Shade
- Air movement
- Drainage surface and subsurface
- Soil Type
- Traffic, Wear, Compaction
- Weather
- High and low temperature
- Humidity
- Dewpoint
- Soil Temperature
- Rainfall
30Disease Triangle
31Management Triangle
32Key Components of Integrated Disease Management
- Species and variety selection
- Mowing practices
- Irrigation timing, amount, and frequency
- Nitrogen fertility
- Micronutrient availability / soil pH management
- Soil and thatch management
- Maximize fungicide use efficiency
- Fungicide resistance management
33Maximizing Fungicide Use Efficiency
- Know your fungicides, select the best fungicide
for each situation - Time applications based on weather conditions,
not the calendar - Apply fungicides properly
34Fungicide Nomenclature
- Chemical Name
- complete chemical formula for the active
ingredient - Common Name
- simplified chemical name for the active
ingredient - Trade Name(s)
- commercial name for the formulated product
35Fungicide Nomenclature Example
- Chemical Name
- tetrachloroisophthalonitrile
- Common Name
- chlorothalonil
- Trade Name(s)
- Daconil, Chlorostar, Concorde, Manicure, Echo
36Fungicide classification
- Chemical Class group of fungicides with similar
chemical properties - Topical mode of action how the fungicide moves
on and in the plant - Biochemical mode of action how growth of the
fungus is inhibited - Genetic mode of action number of genes in the
fungus control that control the inhibited process
37Fungicides 15 Chemical Classes
- Anilides
- Aromatic hydrocarbons
- Benzamides
- Benzimidazoles
- Carbamates
- Dicarboximides
- Dithiocarbamates
- DMIs
- EBDC
- Nitriles
- Phenylamides
- Phenylpyrolles
- Phosphonates
- Polyoxins
- QoIs
38Topical Mode of Action - absorption and movement
in the plant
- contact stays on leaf surface
- localized penetrant absorbed but not
translocated - translaminar absorbed, moves to opposite side
of leaf, but not translocated - mesostemic absorbed, translaminar activity, and
localized movement on leaf surface - systemics
- acropetal penetrant absorbed and translocated
in the xylem only - true systemic absorbed and translocated in
xylem and phloem
39What is a mesostemic fungicide?
40Why is topical mode of action important?
- Determines length of residual control
- Contacts generally ineffective for control of
root and crown diseases - Preventative vs. curative application contacts
poor for curative control, acropetal penetrants
best - Tank mixing mixture components should have
different topical modes of action
41Biochemical Mode of ActionHow pathogen growth is
inhibited
- Multi-site inhibitor interferes with more than
one biochemical reaction in the fungal cell - Single-site inhibitor interferes with one
biochemical reaction
42Biochemical Mode of Action - Examples
- Chlorothalonil (multi-site inhibitor)
- Inhibits thiol-dependent enzymatic reactions
- Thiophanate-methyl (single-site inhibitor)
- Inhibits chromosome separation in cell division
by binding to b-tubulin protein
43Genetic Mode of Action
- Monogenic
- anilides
- benzamides
- benzimidazoles
- phenylamides
- polyoxins
- QoIs
- Oligogenic
- Dicarboxamides
- DMIs
- Polygenic
- aromatic hydrocarbons
- carbamates
- dithiocarbamates
- EBDCs
- nitriles
- phenylpyrolles
- phosphonates
44Why is biochemical and genetic mode of action
important?
- These determine the risk for fungicide resistance
- Rotate or tank-mix products with different
biochemical modes of action to prevent/delay
resistance - Fungicides within a chemical class have the same
biochemical and genetic modes of action
45Heritage, Insignia, CompassBanner, Bayleton,
Eagle, RubiganWhats the Difference?
- Differences within a fungicide class
- Topical mode of action
- Spectrum of control
- Duration of residual control
- Side effects
- Cost
46QoI Fungicides
- 1996 - Heritage (azoxystrobin)
- 1999 Compass (trifloxystrobin)
- 2003 Insignia (pyraclostrobin)
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48Preventative Brown Patch Control 2002
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51Preventative Dollar Spot Control
52Daconil, Chlorostar, Manicure, Echo....Whats
the Difference?
- Differences within a common name
- Active ingredient often made by same company
- Formulations are different
- Formulation impacts disease control, especially
longevity of residual control - Formulation also affects mixing/handling
53Dollar Spot Control with Formulations of
Chlorothalonil
All products applied at 2.7 oz a.i. per 1000
ft2 data collected 14 days after one application
54Side Effects of Fungicides on Turfgrasses
- Prevention/control of other diseases
- Increase of other diseases
- Enhanced turf quality
- Growth regulation / thinning
- Increased thatch accumulation
55Fungicides that Enhance Non-Target Diseases
- chlorothalonil summer patch and stripe smut
- benzimidazoles and DMIs leaf spot / melting out
- benzimidazoles, dicarboxamides, and DMIs
Pythium blight - thiophanate-methyl powdery mildew
- azoxystrobin and flutolanil dollar spot
- DMI fungicides algae
- azoxystrobin yellow spot
56Heritage (0.4 oz, 28 day)
Triton (2 oz, 14 day)
57Choosing a Fungicide
- 1. efficacy on primary disease
- 2. residual control
- 3. control spectrum
- 4. side effects
- 5. Topical and biochemical mode of action
- 6.
58Cost of Gray Leaf Spot Control
8 weeks of preventative treatment for 30 acres
of fairways
59Developing a Fungicide Program
AUGUST
APRIL
JUNE
SEPT
JULY
MAY
OCT
60Applying Fungicides Properly
- Application rate
- Nozzle type
- Nozzle pressure
- Dilution rate
- Post-application irrigation
- Proper application timing
61Fungicide Application Rate
- Preventative applications before disease
symptoms are evident - Use low rate at short intervals or high rate at
long intervals - Contacts or acropetal penetrants are effective
- Curative applications after disease symptoms
are evident - Use high rate at short intervals
- Acropetal penetrants are best, tank-mixing with a
contact fungicide is often beneficial
62Preventative Brown Patch Control 2002
63Nozzle Type Influences Fungicide Effectiveness
Flat Fan Nozzles
Rain Drop Nozzles
64Effect of Nozzle Type on Coverage Uniformity
Raindrop nozzles
Flat fan nozzles
Hamilton et al. 1997
Diquat applied at 1 oz. per 1000 sq ft
65Nozzle Type Impacts Dollar Spot Control with
Iprodione in Creeping Bentgrass
Chipco 26019 applied at 4 oz per 1000 sq ft with
FloodJet TK-30 or TeeJet T-8002 nozzles
H.B. Couch, 1995
66Nozzle Pressure and Droplet Size Impacts Dollar
Spot Control
Dyrene applied to creeping bentgrass at 4 oz per
1000 sq ft with TeeJet T-8002 nozzles
H.B. Couch, 1995
67Dilution Rate and Disease Control
- Dilution rate the amount of water per unit area
in which a pesticide is applied (aka delivery
rate) - Industry Standard 2 gallons per 1000 sq ft
- Equivalent to 1.5 teaspoons per square foot
- Provides adequate coverage for control of foliar
diseases
68Dilution Rate Impacts Dollar Spot Control with
Chlorothalonil
All products applied to deliver 2.7 oz a.i. per
1000 sq ft on 14 day intervals Data collected 15
Aug 2002 Wong et al., Rutgers University
69Control of Root Diseases in Turf
- PLACE FUNGICIDE WHERE THE PATHOGEN IS!!!!
- OPTIONS
- apply in 4 to 5 gallons of water per 1000 ft2
- water in immediately after application (1/4)
- fungicide injection
70Fungicide Application Timing
- Apply fungicides for root diseases based on
temperature in top 1-2 of soil profile - Summer Patch - gt65ºF
- Take-all Patch 40ºF to 60ºF
- Spring Dead Spot - ???
71Fungicide Application Timing
- Foliar diseases - Low temperature is the most
important factor - Dollar Spot - gt50ºF
- Brown Patch gt60ºF
- Pythium blight - gt65ºF
72Key Components of Integrated Disease Management
- Species and variety selection
- Mowing practices
- Irrigation timing, amount, and frequency
- Nitrogen fertility
- Micronutrient availability / soil pH management
- Soil and thatch management
- Maximize fungicide use efficiency
- Fungicide resistance management
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74Resistance to metalaxyl in Pythium aphanidermatum
75Cases of Fungicide Resistance in Turfgrass
- Anthracnose benzimidazoles, QoIs
- Dollar Spot benzimidazoles, dicarboxamides,
DMIs - Gray Leaf Spot QoIs
- Powdery Mildew DMIs
- Pythium Blight phenylamides
76Fungicide Resistance
- Naturally occurring strains of some turf
pathogens have the genetic ability to grow in the
presence of a fungicide
Sclerotinia homoeocarpa
77How does fungicide resistance develop?
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- A small proportion of the pathogen population has
genetic, heritable resistance to the fungicide
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78How does fungicide resistance develop?
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- When the fungicide is applied, the resistant
strain can grow rapidly without competition from
other strains
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79How does fungicide resistance develop?
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- When the resistant strain becomes dominant in the
population, control failure occurs and resistance
has developed
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80Fungicide Resistance in Dollar Spot, caused by S.
homoeocarpa
- Benzimidazoles (Cleary 3336)
- Occurs rapidly and completely
- Resistant strains persist indefinitely
- No cross resistance with other fungicide classes
- Sterol Inhibitors (Banner, Bayleton, Eagle)
- Occurs slowly and gradually
- Resistant strains may not be as competitive
- Most resistant strains are also benzimidazole
resistant
81Practical Tips for Preventing Fungicide Resistance
- Avoid repetitive use of fungicides from the same
chemical class - Alternate or tank-mix products from different
chemical classes - Use preventative control for resistance-prone
diseases - Minimize fungicide use
- Use disease-resistant cultivars and proper
cultural practices
82Preventing Fungicide Resistance
- Tank Mix or Alternate?
- Alternating among fungicide classes is better
than nothing, but resistance will still occur
eventually - Theoretically, tank mixing is a better long-term
approach for prevention of fungicide resistance
83Tank Mixing Fungicides
- Do's
- test for compatibility
- read labels thoroughly
- use tank mixes that are additive or synergistic
- Donts
- tank mix chemicals with similar biochemical or
topical modes of action - apply components at less than labeled rate UNLESS
they have been shown to be BALANCED