Front-load key fungicides to increase wheat yields

Front-load key fungicides to increase wheat yields

The focus of disease control in winter wheat is now shifting to earlier in the season. David Jones reports how spending on key fungicides is changing

Early wheat fungicide sprays are becoming more important to keep on top of diseases as the effectiveness of a key group of pesticides declines. The sharp loss in efficacy of the azole fungicides means the focus is shifting to bolster early disease control as delayed treatments are not often an option. Experts suggest the spending split between the two main fungicide timings of T1 and T2 should be more 50:50 rather than the usual 40:60. This shift to early-season spending comes as the azoles lose their curative activity and so are unable to rescue a bad disease situation later in the season and act as a get out-of-jail-free card. Agronomist Paul Gruber with distributor ProCam believes the battle against the key wheat diseases of septoria and yellow rust needs to start much earlier in the spring. “Because of the decline of the azoles, we cannot fight diseases as well, so we need to spend more early in the season to protect crops,” he tells Farmers Weekly. He sees disease pressure in his area of north Oxfordshire on a par with last spring, with plenty of septoria and yellow rust around after a relatively mild winter. Wheat growers simply cannot allow disease to get established because azoles won’t be able to come to the rescue later in the season, Mr Gruber stresses. “We have to do more early to prevent a massive reservoir of inoculum infecting the flag leaf. We can’t rescue the situation at T2 anymore,” he says. This is leading to questions about the conventional wisdom that the T2 flag-leaf spray is more important than the T1 spray. Iain Hamilton, field technical manager at agrochemical group Syngenta, is looking at the subject at the company’s innovation centre at Grove Farm, Weston on the Green, some three miles south-west of Bicester. “The input at T1 has as big a bearing on yield as what is put on at T2,” he says. Mr Hamilton points out that the curative action of azoles such as epoxiconazole and prothioconazole are at best 30%, down from 90% some 15 years ago. Getting the timing of the T1 spray correct can be tricky and should be related to leaf emergence rather than simply growth stages, he adds. The T1 timing often coincides with GS32, when the first and second nodes are at least 2cm apart on the main stem, but it is better to link T1 to when leaf three is almost fully emerged. This timing can differ by two to three weeks as early-drilled crops can be at GS33 before leaf three is nearly fully emerged, while latedrilled crops can reach leaf three emergence at GS31. “Early-drilled crops are more advanced in terms of nodes, so growers need to focus on the emergence of leaf three,” he says. Mr Gruber suggests a bench- mark for the T1 spray, usually applied in late April/early May, should be a three-way mix of different fungicides. his would include an azole, one of the newer SDHI fungicides and a protectant product such as chlorothalonil. “First, the three-way mix gives the highest yield, and second it will help as part of an anti-resistance strategy,” he says. Resistance strategies took on greater importance after the strobilurin group of fungicides broke down against septoria in the late 1990s, leaving azoles and SDHIs as the only systemic fungicides to control the wet-weather-loving disease. So the focus of attention is now to try to reduce resistance building up and using a good rate of azoles to help protect the viability of the SDHIs. “We need the three-way mix to avoid getting into the strobilurin situation as we can’t afford to lose the SDHIs,” he says. His approach is to use a T0 spray in late March/early April to help dampen down overwintered inoculums, typically using an azole mix of tebuconazole and prochloraz along with chlorothalonil. “The T0 spray used to be an insurance, but now it has become essential,” he says.His T2 flag leaf spray advice in late May would be a similar threeway mix used for T1, with perhaps a strobilurin added to give some rust persistence and for its physiological effect on growth. Mr Hamilton suggests the threeway mixes at T1 and T2 could cost £35-£40/ha each, the T0 azole /chlorothalonil mix £10-£15/ha and the T2 head spray, based on azoles, £20/ha. This would make it difficult to keep four-spray programmes below £100/ha. But as Mr Gruber points out from his group’s trials, every £1/ha spent on fungicides gives a £3/ha reward in terms of extra grain yield. Mr Gruber and Mr Hamilton agree it is essential to keep spray intervals at two to three weeks and four weeks at the very outset.

procam
Iain Hamilton (left) and Paul Gruber examine a wheat crop in north Oxfordshire ahead of a spring fungicide programme.

Article published in – FARMERS WEEKLY –   20 MARCH 2015