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Title: | Sequential post-heading applications for controlling wheat blast: a nine-year summary of fungicide performance in Brazil |
Keywords: | Chemical control Meta-analysis Profitability Pyricularia oryzae |
Issue Date: | 5-Dec-2021 |
Publisher: | APS Publications (The American Phytopathological Society) |
Citation: | ASCARI, J. P. et al. Sequential post-heading applications for controlling wheat blast: a nine-year summary of fungicide performance in Brazil. Plant Disease, [S.l.], v. 105, n. 12, p. 4051-4059, Dec. 2021. DOI: 10.1094/PDIS-06-21-1183-RE. |
Abstract: | Wheat blast, caused by Pyricularia oryzae Triticum lineage, is a major constraint to wheat production, mainly in the tropics of Brazil, where severe epidemics have been more frequent. We analyzed disease and wheat yield data from 42 uniform field trials conducted over 9 years (2012 to 2020) to assess whether the percent control and yield response were influenced by fungicide type, region (tropical or subtropical), and year. Six treatments were selected, all evaluated in at least 19 trials. Two fungicides were applied as solo active ingredients (MANCozeb, and TEBUconazole), and four were premixes (AZOXystrobin plus TEBU, TriFLoXystrobin plus PROThioconazole, TFLX plus TEBU, and PYRAclostrobin plus EPOXiconazole). Percent control, calculated from back-transforming estimates by a meta-analysis network model fitted to the log of the means, ranged from 43 to 58%, with all but PYRA plus EPOX showing efficacy >52% on average, not differing among them. The variation in both efficacy and yield response was explained by region, and all but TEBU performed better in the subtropics than in the tropics. Yield response from using three sequential sprays was approximately two times greater in the subtropics (319 to 532 kg/ha) than in the tropics (149 to 241.3 kg/ha). No significant decline in fungicide efficacy or yield response was observed in 9 years of study for any of the fungicides. These results reinforce the need to improve control by adopting an integrated management approach in the tropics given poorer performance and lower profitability, especially for the premixes, than in the subtropics. |
URI: | https://apsjournals.apsnet.org/doi/10.1094/PDIS-06-21-1183-RE http://repositorio.ufla.br/jspui/handle/1/49966 |
Appears in Collections: | DAG - Artigos publicados em periódicos |
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