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Ontario learns corn vomitoxin lessons

Mcintosh
Matt Mcintosh Correspondent North America
2015-10-22 00:00:00 BURLINGTON, IA - OCTOBER 22: Rick Wirt and his daughte rKrista Kempke harvest corn on October 22, 2015 near Burlington, Iowa. Wirt and his daughter farm more than 2,000 acres in the area. According to the National Corn Growers Association, the overall corn crop is on track to have the 2nd highest average yield on record.   Scott Olson/Getty Images/AFP == FOR NEWSPAPERS, INTERNET, TELCOS & TELEVISION USE ONLY ==
2015-10-22 00:00:00 BURLINGTON, IA - OCTOBER 22: Rick Wirt and his daughte rKrista Kempke harvest corn on October 22, 2015 near Burlington, Iowa. Wirt and his daughter farm more than 2,000 acres in the area. According to the National Corn Growers Association, the overall corn crop is on track to have the 2nd highest average yield on record. Scott Olson/Getty Images/AFP == FOR NEWSPAPERS, INTERNET, TELCOS & TELEVISION USE ONLY ==

Grain farmers throughout North America’s southern Great Lakes region experienced significant vomitoxin problems in the 2018 corn harvest. According to agronomists in the Canadian province of Ontario, however, the unfortunate conditions highlight 2 major agronomic lessons.

More specifically, they say understanding that fungicides are not a cure-all solution is critical – as is planting more fungus-resistant corn hybrid varieties.

Fungicides: a go-to but somewhat ineffective tool

Dale Cowan, senior agronomist and sales manager for 2 supply and retail cooperatives in Ontario’s far southwest, says fungicides generally do not provide adequate control of vomitoxin-producing fungus when weather conditions during critical growth periods are less-than-ideal.

Vomitoxin

Vomitoxin (specifically deoxynivalenol, or DON for short) is a secondary result of a fungal infection, but Cowan says high levels of DON do not necessarily require high levels of fungus; this makes predicting the need for fungicide applications more difficult. The effectiveness of such products also varies greatly between hybrids varieties.

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Fungicides generally do not provide adequate control of vomitoxin-producing fungus when weather conditions during critical growth periods are less-than-ideal. - Photos: ANP

Fungicides generally do not provide adequate control of vomitoxin-producing fungus when weather conditions during critical growth periods are less-than-ideal. – Photos: ANP

This is an even more significant issue given the expense of fungicide applications, which can range between $30-$35 (Cdn) per acre – equivalent to a 6 bushel per acre yield reduction. Where fungicides do produce better results, Cowan adds that control usually tops out at 50 per cent at best.

No significant DON reduction with Proline

Russel Barker, a Pioneer corn hybrid sales representative and certified crop advisor based in the Lake Huron watershed, says even Proline – widely considered one of the most effective fungicides for DON prevention – did not show a significant DON reduction when tested by his company in side-by-side field trials this past year.

He also says not using the fungicide might have even allowed plants to die quicker, giving less time for green foliage to harbour moisture and making things better overall – though Barker reiterates this is speculative.

Russel Barker:

Fungal populations like any population in nature will not be uniform in genetic makeup

Barker adds it may be possible the agricultural community overall is inadvertently selecting for a more virulent form of the fusarium fungus that survives on corn and cereal crop residue.

“That’s merely speculation, but we do know that fungal populations like any population in nature will not be uniform in genetic makeup,” he says.

Shifting focus to hybrid selection

Cowan says it’s important to remember that infection works as “a disease triangle.” For DON to be an issue, that is, susceptible crops like highly DON-sensitive corn hybrids need exposure to source inoculum, as well as the right weather at the critical growth stage.

“You need a wet canopy […] if it’s wet for 16 hours a day or more, that’s the critical factor,” he says. “All 3 points of that triangle have to be at the right place. If we don’t have that wet canopy [in 2019] it won’t be an issue.”

Unfortunately, inoculum is, as Cowan describes, “endemic” in Ontario soils. That means hybrid variety and weather are the only remaining factors to consider.

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For DON to be an issue, that is, susceptible crops like highly DON-sensitive corn hybrids need exposure to source inoculum, as well as the right weather at the critical growth stage.

For DON to be an issue, that is, susceptible crops like highly DON-sensitive corn hybrids need exposure to source inoculum, as well as the right weather at the critical growth stage.

In the future, Cowan says producers need to reduce their overall risk by planting more fungus-tolerant corn hybrids. Growing 3 or 4 hybrids in each field can also help. Scouting at tassel time and being strategic with fungicides, though, is no less important.

Need for greater investment in screening

Better screening for susceptibility in new corn varieties, he says, is also important. And Cowan isn’t the only one to think so. Indeed, in recent months producer organizations, universities, private companies, and government have all begun discussing the need for greater investment in screening, as well as efforts to develop resistant yet high-yielding new hybrids.

Barker says farmers who really pushed for higher yields were more likely to have more severe DON issues. Genetics, however, were still the main variable. “It doesn’t mean we’re going to back off on management. We still want to see all that good stuff,” he says. “Hybrid choice and disease pressure masked everything else.”





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