A check of our research
studies found that the wheat crop is at the Feekes 6 and 7 growth stages
(first and second nodes) across the state. This is an important time to be out in the
wheat and scouting to determine if the use of a foliar fungicide will be
needed as we move into flag leaf emergence (Feekes 8). The flag leaf is
the most important leaf, accounting for upwards of 50% or more of the
final yield and a goal with the use of a foliar fungicide is to protect
this leaf. Most of the questions to date have been about powdery mildew. Susceptible varieties are showing significant disease pressure as warm March temperatures contributed to lush vegetative growth and in some cases pre-jointing lodging.
Looking ahead, there exist some thresholds as you scout at Feekes 7 and 8 to determine if a foliar fungicide may be warranted.
At Feekes 7, the thresholds are:
Powdery mildew: check the uppermost leaf - the threshold is an average of five pustules per leaf.
Wheat leaf rust: check any leaf - the threshold is an average of one pustule per leaf.
Septoria leaf blotch: check the uppermost leaf - the threshold is 25% of the leaves having expanding blotches
At Feekes 8, the thresholds are:
Powdery
mildew: check from the flag-2 leaf (2nd leaf below the flag leaf) and
upward - the threshold is an average of five pustules per leaf on the
flag-2 leaf.
Wheat leaf rust: check from the flag-3 (3rd leaf
below the flag leaf) and upward - the threshold is an average of one
pustule per leaf on the flag-3 leaf.
Septoria leaf blotch: check from the flag-2 and upward - the threshold is 25% of the leaves having blotches
If
you note disease in the lower canopy but not on any of the leaves
discussed above, consider increasing the frequency of your scouting to
determine if there is evidence of new pustules or blotches moving into
the upper canopy.
For further information regarding factors to
consider for determining the need for a foliar fungicide recommendation,
please check here.
For information regarding the efficacy of several foliar fungicides against different wheat diseases, please check here.
Results
across our different studies the past few years have indicated that the
best response to a foliar fungicide application has occurred when
powdery mildew was the target and the wheat variety was susceptible.
When the wheat variety was resistant to powdery mildew, we have not seen
a consistent response, if at all.