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Crop Diseases
in
Corn, Soybean, and Wheat

Karen Rane and Gail Ruhl

Department of Botany and Plant Pathology
Purdue University
West Lafayette, IN 47907

Email: rane@purdue.edu,
ruhlg@purdue.edu


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This web page address is:
http://www.btny.purdue.edu/Extension/Pathology/CropDiseases/Wheat/Wheat1.html

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Wheat Disease Name:

LEAF DISEASES

Wheat Image newpmleaf.jpg

WHEAT

Disease Name: Powdery Mildew

Pathogen: Fungus. Erysiphe graminis f. sp. tritici

Symptoms: White or gray-brown powdery or cottony patches of mycelium (fungal threads) on the upper surface of lower leaves. Tiny, brown-black specks (cleistothecia) are visible in older gray-brown areas. Yellowing is usually visible on the undersides of leaves opposite the powdery patches.

Conditions: Disease development is favored by early canopy closure, heavy nitrogen fertilization, high plant populations, high humidity, and cool temperatures.

Inoculum Survival: Infected crop residues.

Inoculum Dispersal: Airborne spores.

Management: Crop rotations, resistant cultivars, destruction of residues, proper fertilization, foliar fungicides. Do not plant susceptible cultivar prior to fly-free date.

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Wheat Image WheatRustL.jpg

WHEAT

Disease Name: Leaf Rust

Pathogen: Fungus. Puccinia recondita f. sp. tritici

Symptoms: Dry, yellow (chlorotic) flecks to red or brown-black necrotic spots on upper leaf surfaces.

Conditions: Infection favored by moisture and cool temperatures (59-72 F).

Inoculum Survival: Does not survive in Indiana.

Inoculum Dispersal: Airborne spores from south and southwest.

Management: Resistant cultivars, fungicides. Plant early-maturing cultivars.

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Wheat Image newseptoriablotch.jpg

WHEAT

Disease Name: Septoria Leaf Blotch

Pathogen: Fungus. Leaf and glume blotch: Septoria nodorum (Leptosphaeria nodorum), and leaf blotch: S. tritici (Mycosphaerella graminicola)

Symptoms: Chlorotic (yellow) water-soaked flecks becoming dry, yellow, then red-brown lesions. S. nodorum lesions are round. S. tritici lesions are blocky with tiny black specks (pycnidia) visible in rows in mature lesions.

Conditions: Cool, wet, windy weather favors S. tritici development. Warm, wet weather favors S. nodorum.

Inoculum Survival: Infected residues, seed, voluteer wheat, some grassy weed hosts.

Inoculum Dispersal: Airborne spores.

Management: Resistant cultivars, pathogen-free seed, crop rotation. Destruction of infested straw, stubble, and volunteer wheat. Foliar fungicides, fungicide seed treatment.

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Wheat Image TanspotL.jpg

WHEAT

Disease Name: Tan Spot or Yellow Leaf Spot

Pathogen:Fungus. Helminthosporium tritici-repentis (Drechslera tritici-repentis, Pyrenophora tritici-repentis)

Symptoms: Tan-brown, flecks on upper and lower leaf surfaces expanding to blotches 12 mm long (often with yellow borders). Fungal fruiting bodies (pseudothecia) are visible as dark raised specks on wheat straw.

Conditions: Disease is favored by prolonged wet periods.

Inoculum Survival: Infected crop residues.

Inoculum Dispersal: Airborne spores.

Management: Crop rotation, tolerant or resistant cultivars, destruction of wheat stubble, fungicides.

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ROOT DISEASES

Wheat Image FusariumFootrotL.jpg

WHEAT

Disease Name: Fusarium Foot Rot

Pathogen: Fungus. Fusarium sp.

Symptoms: Seedling blight, root rot. Crown and lower nodes turn brown.

Conditions: Disease is favored by stress conditions.

Inoculum Survival: Soil, seed.

Inoculum Dispersal: Soilborne and seedborne spores.

Management: Crop rotation, planting after fly-free date, good soil nutrition, proper planting depth.

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Wheat Image RhizocSpringBlight.jpg

WHEAT

Disease Name: Rhizoctonia Spring Blight

Pathogen: Fungus. Rhizoctonia cerealis

Symptoms: Large, irregular lesions on dormant leaves. If plants are dormant or stressed after infection, the fungus may develop into crown tissue and plants may die. Severely infected plants fail to green-up in spring, or may be green for a short period and then die.

Conditions: Favored by fluctuating late winter or early spring temperatures, wet conditions, and heavy nitrogen applications.

Inoculum Survival: Fungal mycelia and sclerotia in the soil.

Inoculum Dispersal: Soilborne propagules.

Management: Use granular formulations of nitrogen in late winter or early spring over light snow or wet frozen ground that will thaw within a few hours of application. Or use split nitrogen applications.

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Wheat Image TakeAll.jpg

WHEAT

Disease Name: Take-all

Pathogen: Fungus. Gaeumannomyces graminis var. tritici

Symptoms: Infected plants appear mildly chlorotic and have fewer tillers. Severely infected plants are stunted, develop white (bleached) heads, and die prematurely. Roots are few, black, and brittle.

Conditions: Favored by cool temperatures (50-68 F) and wet soil conditions , neutral to alkaline soils, nitrogen- and phosphorous-deficient soils. More severe where wheat follows wheat or with no-till.

Inoculum Survival: Soil.

Inoculum Dispersal: Soilborne mycelial fragments.

Management: Tolerant cultivars, crop rotation. Avoid planting before the fly-free date. Avoid nitrogen stress. Add ammonia or slow-release forms of nitrogen in fall.

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