Agriculture (May 2024)

Management of Rust in Wheat Using IPM Principles and Alternative Products

  • Lise Nistrup Jørgensen,
  • Niels Matzen,
  • Rebekka Leitzke,
  • Jane E. Thomas,
  • Aoife O’Driscoll,
  • Bettina Klocke,
  • Claude Maumene,
  • Ida Lindell,
  • Kerstin Wahlquist,
  • Līga Zemeca,
  • Marcos Barberena Apesteguia,
  • Biango Randazzo,
  • Svetlana Slikova,
  • Sarah Holdgate

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/agriculture14060821
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 6
p. 821

Abstract

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Overall, there is a major wish that European farmers implement integrated pest management (IPM), particularly to reduce dependence on pesticides. In the European Rustwatch project, partners conducted nineteen trials across nine different countries during 2020 and 2021 to investigate different IPM strategies, focusing on controlling rust diseases in winter wheat. The trials included the use of varieties with contrasting levels of resistance, variety mixtures, reduced fungicide rates, thresholds, and Decision Support Systems (DSSs), and testing alternative products to fungicides. Sixteen trials developed yellow rust (Puccinia striiformis f. sp. tritici) infections, and six trials developed brown rust (Puccinia triticina) infections. Resistant varieties proved highly effective in keeping down yellow rust infection, and variety mixtures also effectively reduced infection levels and stabilized yields. Rust was fully controlled using 25% of standard fungicide rates, even under high disease pressure. Using DSSs provided sufficient control of rust diseases and resulted in competitive net economic returns due to fewer fungicide applications. The alternative products tested included two biological control agents and four alternative chemistries, which all gave inferior and insufficient control against rust compared with chemical fungicides. The trial work demonstrated that there are good and reliable options for including IPM into disease control in wheat.

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