1 / 23

Asian Soybean Rust: Scouting & Sampling in Illinois

Asian Soybean Rust: Scouting & Sampling in Illinois. University of Illinois State Soybean Rust Taskforce Suzanne Bissonnette, IPM Educator. Brand New Editions Be ready with effective scouting. Assessment of Disease. Incidence:

Antony
Download Presentation

Asian Soybean Rust: Scouting & Sampling in Illinois

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Asian Soybean Rust: Scouting & Sampling in Illinois University of Illinois State Soybean Rust Taskforce Suzanne Bissonnette, IPM Educator

  2. Brand New EditionsBe ready with effective scouting

  3. Assessment of Disease • Incidence: • The number of plants (or units) affected by disease with in a population • ie 47 of 100 plants diseased= 47% incidence • Severity: • The measure of actual damage done by disease • Some keys measure severity of the whole plant • Some keys measure severity on infected leaves

  4. Assessment of Rust Severity • Researchers generally assess rust disease as disease severity of key leaves. • Rust pustules only occupy a maximum of 37% of the area on a leaf. This is equivalent to 100% infection of that leaf.

  5. Rust Severity Assessment Key A= actual amount of tissue occupied by pustules (Cobb scale) B= equivalent damage to leaf (Modified Cobb) * If A=18.5% area occupied by pustules, this is equivalent to B=50% damage to the leaf *

  6. Disease Scouting for Soybean Rust Incidence • U of I recommends determining incidence rather than severity for scouting protocol. • Note: one plant with any amount of rust in 100 plants = 1% incidence

  7. Illinois Scouting –“Look Low As You Go” • When scouting examine the lower quarter of soybean plants • Examine 20 plants in 5 random locations in a field. • Examine the undersides of leaves for pustules.

  8. Soybean Rust Scouting Field Pattern • Scout in a zig-zag pattern in the field making observations of 20 plants in 5 locations

  9. Foliar Symptoms Soybean Rustnot distinguishing must look closer

  10. Symptoms & Signs of Soybean Rust • Look for pustules and chlorosis on undersides of lower leaves before flowering. • Severity increases with time and rainfall – lesions can develop on all leaves followed by defoliation Observe chlorosis Look at underside of leaves Observe pustules with hand lens

  11. Soybean Rust PustulesUnderside leaves*, Stems, Petioles, Cotyledons

  12. Other Soybean Diseases that Can Be Confused with Soybean Rust • Septoria Brown Spot J. Pataky U of I

  13. Other Soybean Diseases that Can Be Confused with Soybean Rust • Bacterial Pustule • Bacterial Blight

  14. Other Soybean Diseases that Can Be Confused with Soybean Rust • Downy Mildew

  15. Hosts of Soybean Rust (>90) Legumes (Papilionoideae) Cultivated Crops: • Soybean Glycine max • Lima & butter bean Phaseolus lunatus • Green & kidney bean Phaseolus vulgaris • Cowpea Vigna unguiculata • Pigeon pea Cajanus cajan • Yam bean, jicama Pachyrhizus erosus Ornamental plants: • Hyacinth bean, lupine, • royal poinciana Wild hosts: • Kudzu, sweet clover Kudzu infected with soybean rust

  16. Kudzu population Distribution and Rust detections December 6, 2004

  17. Illinois Scouting –“Look Low As You Go” • If you suspect rust • collect 20 leaflets exhibiting symptoms. • Place flat, dry leaflets between paper towels. • Double bag suspect leaflets in zip lock bags. • Clearly label sample.

  18. IL Extension Distance Diagnostics(DDDI Available in all Units in Illinois) Sample Process • digital images submitted for you by Unit • Diagnosis email reply to Unit • Samples may then require submission to U of I Plant Clinic.

  19. IL Extension Distance Diagnostics(DDDI Available in all Units in Illinois) • No fee for DDDI samples. • Plant Clinic fee ($12.50) paid by ISPOB if sample is pre-screened with DDDI • Expect to pay overnight shipping prior to detection in state.

  20. Sample Action Plan & Submission Flow Chart

  21. Sample Submission Flow Chart, cont.

  22. Prepare Yourself for Soybean Rust Before It Arrives • Equip sprayers with proper nozzles • Pre-plan fungicide spray program • Who? How much acreage/day? • Plan to scout “Low as you go” weekly • Take representative sample • Get it properly identified

  23. Acknowledgements: Presentation by S. Bissonnette, D. Bowman, D. Malvick, M. Montgomery Acknowledge slides & jpg’s from G. Hartman, M. Miles, USDA-ARS, R. Frederick, M. Palm and University of Illinois Extension

More Related