RE-EVALUATING RUST

By Special to The T&DSunday, April 09, 2006

1 comment(s) | Default | Large

BLACKVILLE — South Carolina farmers concerned about Asian Soybean Rust, a potentially devastating crop disease that is new to North America, have some reasons for optimism for 2006, according to a Clemson University scientist.

“If rust behaves the way it did in 2005, soybean growers should come out all right,” says John Mueller, plant pathologist/nematologist at Edisto Research and Education Center.

“Last year we never saw it before flowering in any field,” he said. “If it will do that again, we’ve got a good chance of going in and spraying fungicides once or twice, depending on rust pressure, and doing a good job of protecting everything.”

Mueller said that no one can predict what rust will do. His most likely scenario, however, calls for more rust than last year, unless the state goes through a drought.

“In that case rust will be a secondary problem,” he said. “Given a choice, I’d rather fight rust than drought.” Mueller said that a big key to controlling ASR will be the 15 sentinel plots established around the state as an early warning system for growers.

Every soybean grower should be within 50 miles of a monitoring site.

“If rust shows up in your area, don’t worry about it unless your soybeans are flowering,” he said. “If your beans are flowering and it’s going to be moist and rust is beginning to show up, that’s when you need to spray.”

“It will be important for growers not to begin believing that rust is overrated,” he said. “If that’s the attitude they take into this season, they will be in trouble. Prices are dropping and profit margins will be lower.”

Mueller said South Carolina producers spent at least $500,000 spraying for rust in 2005.

He encourages growers to keep track of rust developments through the USDA Web site at www.sbrusa.net and through his electronic newsletter. It will be sent out when needed. Growers can subscribe by sending an e-mail to jmllr@clemson.edu.

He thinks that the state came out of the winter fairly free of ASR because of killing frosts.

“We’ve had temperatures in the mid-20s. That’s more than enough to kill off any kudzu, an alternate host, or weeds where rust might overwinter,” Mueller said.

He noted that while the northern half of Georgia is pretty clean, it is possible to find rust on kudzu in south Georgia that has been protected from frost kill by cover from abandoned buildings and interstate highway overpasses.

Mueller said that a disease called frogeye leaf spot will make it harder to find rust, since symptoms are similar. He recommends planting soybean varieties that are resistant to frogeye.

Mueller advised growers not to plant more beans than they can spray in a timely manner.

“Once rust is in your field, you want to spray with a triazole such as Folicur, Laredo or Domark. If rust is still 50 miles away and your Group VIIs are about to flower, I’d include a protectant in my spray. If you’re in St. Matthews and rust is in Hampton and the weather is perfect, I’d probably recommend a protectant,” he said. “The triazoles will not control the other diseases like frogeye, brown spot, pod and stem blight or anthracnose.

“If you’re aiming to control them, include a strobilurin in your tank — Headline, Quilt, Stratego, Quadris or combinations. Topsin M is effective on the other diseases, but not on rust.”

 
1 comment(s)
The following comments are reader submitted. They do not represent the views of The T&D or Lee Enterprises.

Charlotte Fairchild wrote on Apr 11, 2006 7:21 AM:

" How do you know a fungus on a plant is not dangerous to people living next door, or to the gardens near a kudzu patch with rust? "



» Post a comment Thanks for your comment! Once approved, your comment will appear on the site.

You must be logged in to comment.

Click Here To Sign in

Click here to get an account
it's free and quick
Please note: The Times and Democrat provides our story commenting feature in order to solicit feedback, debate and discussion on topics of local interest. Please keep in mind that civility is a necessary component of productive conversation. All blatantly inflammatory or otherwise inappropriate comments (i.e. vulgarity, marketing, etc.) are subject to rejection and/or removal. Comments will appear if and when they are approved. Thanks for reading, and thanks for participating.
Asian soybean rust, a fungus that can defoliate soybean plants leading to significant loss of crop yield. The disease itself is a threat only to plants, not to people or animals. TOM LOLLIS/CLEMSON EXTENSION

More Features