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Fundamentals of Corn Pathology Paul Vincelli University of Kentucky
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Fundamentals of Corn Pathology Paul Vincelli University of Kentucky.

Dec 15, 2015

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Page 1: Fundamentals of Corn Pathology Paul Vincelli University of Kentucky.

Fundamentals of Corn Pathology

Paul Vincelli

University of Kentucky

Page 2: Fundamentals of Corn Pathology Paul Vincelli University of Kentucky.

Disease triangle

What are some factors that favor disease development in KY corn production?

Page 3: Fundamentals of Corn Pathology Paul Vincelli University of Kentucky.

Corn residue can favor certain diseases

What is the most practical way to kill out pathogens surviving in corn residue?

Spores of gray leaf spot fungus

Page 4: Fundamentals of Corn Pathology Paul Vincelli University of Kentucky.

Almost all disease management in corn is

preplant.

Page 5: Fundamentals of Corn Pathology Paul Vincelli University of Kentucky.

Leaf diseases

Page 6: Fundamentals of Corn Pathology Paul Vincelli University of Kentucky.

Gray leaf spot

Page 7: Fundamentals of Corn Pathology Paul Vincelli University of Kentucky.

Gray leaf spot

Hybrid differencesLeaf blighting

Page 8: Fundamentals of Corn Pathology Paul Vincelli University of Kentucky.

Northern leaf blight

Image by K. Leonard and E. G. SuggsCourtesy of the American Phytopathological Society

Page 9: Fundamentals of Corn Pathology Paul Vincelli University of Kentucky.

Large, coalescing lesions of NLB

Page 10: Fundamentals of Corn Pathology Paul Vincelli University of Kentucky.

Susceptible and resistant reactions to Northern leaf blight

Image by K. Leonard and E. G. SuggsCourtesy of the American Phytopathological Society

Susceptiblehybrid

Chlorotic lesionReaction (Ht resistance)

Page 11: Fundamentals of Corn Pathology Paul Vincelli University of Kentucky.

NLB: Susceptible vs Ht resistance

Page 12: Fundamentals of Corn Pathology Paul Vincelli University of Kentucky.

NLB: susceptible (R) vs Ht resistance (L)

Henderson County, 2004

Page 13: Fundamentals of Corn Pathology Paul Vincelli University of Kentucky.

Lodging from Severe NLB

Courtesy Bill Meachum, Pioneer

Page 14: Fundamentals of Corn Pathology Paul Vincelli University of Kentucky.

Rusts

Southern rust

Common rust

Common rust

Rust spores

Page 15: Fundamentals of Corn Pathology Paul Vincelli University of Kentucky.

Brown spot

Page 16: Fundamentals of Corn Pathology Paul Vincelli University of Kentucky.

Purple leaf sheath

Page 17: Fundamentals of Corn Pathology Paul Vincelli University of Kentucky.

Holcus spot

Page 18: Fundamentals of Corn Pathology Paul Vincelli University of Kentucky.

Infection of foliage by bacteria

Fire blight

Page 19: Fundamentals of Corn Pathology Paul Vincelli University of Kentucky.

Stalk rots

Page 20: Fundamentals of Corn Pathology Paul Vincelli University of Kentucky.

Anthracnose lower stalk rot

in mature plants

Page 21: Fundamentals of Corn Pathology Paul Vincelli University of Kentucky.

Anthracnose top dieback

G. Munkvold

Page 22: Fundamentals of Corn Pathology Paul Vincelli University of Kentucky.

Diplodia stalk rot

Page 23: Fundamentals of Corn Pathology Paul Vincelli University of Kentucky.

Gibberella stalk rot

Page 24: Fundamentals of Corn Pathology Paul Vincelli University of Kentucky.

Gibberella (left) and Diplodia (right) stalk rots

Page 25: Fundamentals of Corn Pathology Paul Vincelli University of Kentucky.

Stalk rot = disintegration of pith

Charcoal stalk rot

Page 26: Fundamentals of Corn Pathology Paul Vincelli University of Kentucky.

Factors that EnhanceCorn Stalk Rots

•High plant populations

•High nitrogen rates

•High levels of leaf disease

Page 27: Fundamentals of Corn Pathology Paul Vincelli University of Kentucky.

High-yield production can favor stalk rots

Page 28: Fundamentals of Corn Pathology Paul Vincelli University of Kentucky.

Seedling diseases

Page 29: Fundamentals of Corn Pathology Paul Vincelli University of Kentucky.

Pythium damping off

Data of Woltz and TeKrony

Karen Rane, Purdue U.

Page 30: Fundamentals of Corn Pathology Paul Vincelli University of Kentucky.

Anthracnose in seedlings

Page 31: Fundamentals of Corn Pathology Paul Vincelli University of Kentucky.

Other Diseases

Page 32: Fundamentals of Corn Pathology Paul Vincelli University of Kentucky.

Common Smut

Page 33: Fundamentals of Corn Pathology Paul Vincelli University of Kentucky.

Maize dwarf mosaic

Page 34: Fundamentals of Corn Pathology Paul Vincelli University of Kentucky.

Maize chlorotic dwarf virus

Page 35: Fundamentals of Corn Pathology Paul Vincelli University of Kentucky.

Crazy top

Page 36: Fundamentals of Corn Pathology Paul Vincelli University of Kentucky.

Ear and kernel rotsMycotoxins

Page 37: Fundamentals of Corn Pathology Paul Vincelli University of Kentucky.

Diplodia fungus

Page 38: Fundamentals of Corn Pathology Paul Vincelli University of Kentucky.

Diplodia ear rot

Page 39: Fundamentals of Corn Pathology Paul Vincelli University of Kentucky.

Fusarium ear rot: Fumonisins

Page 40: Fundamentals of Corn Pathology Paul Vincelli University of Kentucky.

Gibberella ear rot

Produces zearalenone and DON

Page 41: Fundamentals of Corn Pathology Paul Vincelli University of Kentucky.

Aspergillus ear rot: Aflatoxins

Page 42: Fundamentals of Corn Pathology Paul Vincelli University of Kentucky.

Extension publications on mycotoxins

Page 43: Fundamentals of Corn Pathology Paul Vincelli University of Kentucky.

Maximum Fumonisin Levels Recommended by US FDA

Intended use

Max fumonisins (FB1+FB2+FB3)

Equids and rabbits 5 ppm(no more than 20% of diet)

Swine and catfish 20 ppm(no more than 50% of diet)

Human foods 2-4 ppm

Page 44: Fundamentals of Corn Pathology Paul Vincelli University of Kentucky.

Corn with 26 ppm fumonisins

Page 45: Fundamentals of Corn Pathology Paul Vincelli University of Kentucky.

FDA Aflatoxin Action Levels

Action Level (parts per billion)

Commodity Species

0.5 Milk Humans

20 Any food except milk

Humans

20 Feed Livestock*

*Exceptions for breeding cattle, breeding swine, mature poultry, finishing swine, & finishing beef cattle

Page 46: Fundamentals of Corn Pathology Paul Vincelli University of Kentucky.

Factors That Enhance Corn Ear and Kernel Rots and Preharvest Mycotoxin

Accumulation

• Hot, dry weather during silking or grain fill

• Delayed harvest

• Injury to kernels (insects, birds)

• Hybrids with ears at maturity that are:

- upright

- incomplete husk coverage

Page 47: Fundamentals of Corn Pathology Paul Vincelli University of Kentucky.

Crop stress can favor preharvest mycotoxin contamination

• Fusarium ear rot• Aspergillus ear rot

Page 48: Fundamentals of Corn Pathology Paul Vincelli University of Kentucky.

Harvest management can influence postharvest accumulation

of mycotoxins

Page 49: Fundamentals of Corn Pathology Paul Vincelli University of Kentucky.

Reducing risks of mycotoxins in storage

• Adjust combine for minimum kernel damage• Dry below 15.5% within 24-48 hours of shelling• Clean storage facilities and control insects• Aerate and check for heating and crusting

Page 50: Fundamentals of Corn Pathology Paul Vincelli University of Kentucky.

Testing corn samples

UK Grain Quality Testing LabAttn: Michael D. Montross 

Biosystems & Agricultural Engineering

128 Barnhart Bldg. 

University of Kentucky

Lexington, KY  40546-0276

Voice: (859) 257-3000 X106

Fax: (859) 257-5671

Email: [email protected]

Page 51: Fundamentals of Corn Pathology Paul Vincelli University of Kentucky.

Headline 6 fl oz, Quilt 14 fl oz, Stratego 10 oz

63 out of 168 = 38% of the time had a yield increase of 6 bu/A or greater.

Mean = 3 bu/A increase over the untreated

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Location or Hybrid

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Page 52: Fundamentals of Corn Pathology Paul Vincelli University of Kentucky.

-30

-20

-10

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20

30

40

50

60

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Overall Yield ResponseUniversity (68) and On-Farm (121) Trials

*Assumes $3.75/bu corn and $20/ac for fungicide. Break-even response = 5.3 bu/ac

Overall yield advantage: 8.7 bu/acPercent wins: 79%Economically beneficial*: 60%Average net return: $12.63/ac

(121 hybrids from 20 companies)

PIONEER SUMMARY