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Asian Soybean Rust Gregory Shaner Dept Botany and Plant Pathology Purdue University. Revised: 1/30/2006. Two species of rust fungi infect soybean. Phakopsora pachyrhizi Asian Soybean Rust Extremely damaging First reported in continental U.S. in Nov 2004 Phakopsora meibomiae
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Asian Soybean RustGregory ShanerDept Botany and Plant PathologyPurdue University Revised: 1/30/2006
Two species of rust fungi infect soybean • Phakopsora pachyrhizi • Asian Soybean Rust • Extremely damaging • First reported in continental U.S. in Nov 2004 • Phakopsora meibomiae • Known for many years from subtropical Americas • Not as aggressive • Not known in U.S.
Continental U.S. - 2004 Hawaii 1994 Australasia - 1902 through the 1960 Uganda - 1997 Zimbabwe - 1998 S. Africa - 2001 Paraguay - 2001 Brazil -2002 Argentina - 2002
How did Phakopsora pachyrhizi get to the U.S.? • Most likely hurricane winds in autumn of 2004 • South America • Central America • Land bridge • Gradual movement from South America to Central America, Mexico, southern U.S. • Short-distance movement on susceptible plants
Soybean rust is a foliar disease • Fungus infects mainly leaf blades • Infections may also occur on leaf petioles and pods • Most pustules are on the underside of the leaf
Tan and Red Brown reactions to Phakopsora pachyrhizi (USDA-APHIS Web site)
Rust can reduce yields 10-80% • Premature defoliation • Poor pod filling • Smaller seed • Rusts are obligate parasites, so they do more than just remove photosynthetic leaf area
Disease triangle Pathogen Host Environment
Soybean rust is a polycyclic disease Pustule from primary infection
Spores from primary pustules cause more infection About 9 days are required for an infection to mature into a pustule
These infection cycles begin whenever conditions allow spores on leaves to germinate and penetrate Pustule numbers increase exponentially
Day 1 Day 6 Day 13 Day 27 Soybean rust can develop very rapidly
Winter survival of soybean rust • This is the bottleneck • Rust fungi do not persist in crop residue • Soybean rust is not seed borne • It survives on green host plants • Unlikely to survive the winter in most U.S. soybean areas • Probably will survive the winter on the Gulf Coast or Caribbean
The soybean rust fungus has a broad host range • Phakopsora pachyrhizi is known to infect 35 species of legumes in addition to soybean • Among these are several weeds and crops grown in the U.S. • Most of these other host species occur in the South
Possible hosts of soybean rust in Indiana Cultivated Crops: Soybeans Korean and Japanese clover White clover Kidney beans Garden pea Ornamental plants: Hyacinth bean Wild hosts: Kudzu Crown-vetch Yellow sweet clover Kudzu with soybean rust
Soybean rust on kudzu www.planthealth.info
Epidemiology scenario • Overwintering in South • Annual migration of spores into Midwest • Damage will depend on: • How early spores arrive from South • How favorable local weather is for spread
36.8% 10.5% 6.1% 5.2% 7.6% 7.4%
Weather that Favors Rust • Summer climate in Midwest will probably be generally favorable for rust • Temperatures from 59 to 82 °F • Dew for several hours is sufficient for infection
Management of soybean rust • Resistant cultivars • This would be the desirable approach, but there are none • Cultural practices • Tillage, rotation, date of planting will not likely have any effect • Fungicides • There are several effective fungicides
Resistant cultivars • USDA has been screening germplasm in a containment facility and in other countries • So far, not much resistant germplasm has been found in Glycine max • Some germplasm lines have partial resistance • It’s not known if this resistance is sufficient to provide protection
Fungicides • Fungicides will be the only control option for several years to come • Effective fungicides currently fully labeled: • Chlorothalonil (Bravo, Echo 720) • Azoxystrobin (Quadris) • Pyraclostrobin (Headline) • Topsin M, also labeled for use on soybean, does not control rust
Fungicides approved under Section 18 • Myclobutanil (Laredo) • Tebuconazole (Folicur, Orius, Uppercut) • Propiconazole (Tilt, Bumper, Propimax) • Propiconazole + Trifloxystrobin (Stratego) • Tetraconazole (Domark)
Systemic vs. non systemic fungicides • Most fungicides that are, or will be, labeled for soybean rust are systemic • They are absorbed by plant and move in transpiration stream (toward leaf tips) • Products differ in degree of systemicity • These products may show some curative activity • Non systemic fungicides provide a protective barrier on the leaf surface
Types of fungicide action • Protectant • Applied before disease onset • Kills spores as they begin to infect • Curative • Can kill established infections before symptoms appear • Eradicant • Inhibits development of an established, symptomatic infection • May have antisporulant activity
Effects of fungicides on rust development Spore germination Mycelial growth Pre- sporulation Penetration Sporulation Chlorothalonil Triazoles Strobilurins Highly effective Little or no effect
Strobilurin plus triazole:Twin biochemical modes of action Strobilurin Inhibits electron transfer in cytochrome bc1 complex of mitochondria. Therefore, disrupts energy production by the fungus. Powerful preventative action Fungal cell Triazole Inhibits sterol biosynthesis. Sterols are important components of the cell membrane. Good curative activity ...... also of benefit for resistance management
Alto (cyproconazole) Folicur (tebuconazole) Soybean rust fungicides: Biokinetics (bioassay) 10 x 5 microlitre droplets (1.9 g ai/ha = 0.027 oz av ai/A; assumed spray volume of 200 l/ha = 21.4 US Gal/A) applied to all leaflets in zone between the two white lines 1 day before inoculating lower leaf surface Opus (epoxiconazole) Untreated
An effective fungicide product is only part of the story • Application must be timely • Good coverage is important • This includes getting fungicide down in the canopy • By the time pustules break out on infected leaves, one or more leaves will have formed above
Application timing • Fungicides work better as protectants than as therapeutics • First spray should be applied before incidence exceeds 5% • This means only a few pustules at mid-canopy on no more than 1/20 of the plants • If application is delayed until most plants have rust, control will be unsatisfactory • Incubation period is what can trip you up
Application technology • Droplet size <220 m (“fine” to “medium”) • 60 drops per cm2 of leaf (387/in2) • Nozzles 1 ft above canopy • 15 to 20 gpa spray volume • 5 gpa for aerial application
Spraying conditions • Don’t spray when: • Temperature is above 86 °F • Relative humidity is below 55% • Wind speed is greater than 5 mph
Will more than one application be needed? • Rust may start before plants have produced all their leaves • A plant at R1 has developed only half its nodes • New growth won’t be protected
Should growers scout their fields? • Initial infections may be focal • These may be overlooked • Sentinel plots may be used • Several plots in each state • Sown 2 wk before normal sowing time • Monitored twice weekly for rust • Once rust is found, a general alert will be issued
Diagnosis and detection • Early infections can be difficult to see • Sporulation is on underside of leaf • Several look-alike diseases • Bacterial pustule • Bacterial blight • Brown spot
Bacterial blight is another rust look-alike Lesions produced by Pseudomonas savastanoi pv glycinea. These may superficially resemble rust, but inspection with a hand lens will reveal the difference.
Brown spot Common in Indiana Appears soon after plants emerge Spots don’t reach upper leaves until late in the summer
Who is looking for rust? • Scouting activity in Indiana will begin in the spring • Plant pathologists at Purdue and county extension educators will be looking for soybean rust • First detection of rust will also depend on others • Soybean growers • Crop advisors • Seed company staff • Crop certification inspectors • Survey entomologists