stem rust of wheat: an oklahoma perspective b. hunger, b. tipton, j. edwards, a. klatt, and b....
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Stem Rust of Wheat: An Stem Rust of Wheat: An Oklahoma PerspectiveOklahoma Perspective
B. Hunger, B. Tipton, J. Edwards, A. Klatt, and B. Hunger, B. Tipton, J. Edwards, A. Klatt, and B. CarverB. Carver
Oklahoma State UniversityOklahoma State University
Wheat Leaf Rust Wheat Leaf Rust ((Puccinia triticinaPuccinia triticina))
Wheat Stripe Rust Wheat Stripe Rust ((Puccinia striiformisPuccinia striiformis f. sp. f. sp. triticitritici))
Apache, OK; Mar, 2005Lahoma, OK; Apr, 2005 Lahoma, OK; Apr, 2005
Wheat Stem Rust Wheat Stem Rust ((Puccinia graminis f. sp. tritici)
Photo above courtesy of Cereal Disease Lab, St. Paul, MN
Lahoma; mid 1980s
Wheat Rust Losses: OklahomaWheat Rust Losses: Oklahoma
0
5
10
15
Years (1980-2005)
Percentage (%) yield loss
Stem
Stripe
Leaf
1980 1985 1992 1997 20052001
Data from Cereal Disease Lab, St.
Paul, MN
State No. of yearssince 1918
Avg. loss(%)
Greatest loss & year
TX 26 2.05 10.0% in 1922, 1935
OK 16 1.58 4.0% in 1918
KS 32 2.37 12.0% in 1935
NE 28 5.70 30.0% in 1962
SD 31 8.03 35.2% in 1953
ND 28 10.57 56.5% in 1935
Wheat Yield Losses Reported for Stem RustSince 1918 in the Great Plains
(Source: Cereal Disease Lab, St. Paul, MN)
Only minimal losses since the mid-1960s
1935: Percent Loss to Wheat Stem Rust
Data and slide courtesy of Cereal Disease Lab, St. Paul, MN
M. Lee Phillips, 1940 Canadian Cty. Ag Extension Report, p. 17
Mr. Joseph Danne
M. Lee Phillips, 1939 Canadian Cty. Ag Extension Report, p. 21
Pedigree for Triumph Hard Red Winter Wheat
Kanred/Blackhull//Burbank’s Quality/3/Kanred/Blackhull
•Kanred: a selection from Crimean (a ‘Turkey’ type) released from KSU in 1917.
•Blackhull: a selection from Turkey made by E.G. Clark (KS farmer-breeder) also released in 1917.
•Burbank’s Quality (CItr 6607): a white spring wheat; “grown experimentally and to a small extent commercially in CA, MT, and OK in 1920.”
•Danne’s first crosses with Burbank’s Quality were made in 1925.
Triumph Hard Red Winter Wheat
•Released in 1940 by Joseph Danne; grown in TX, OK, KS, CO, MO, IL, and KY.
•Superior characteristics included early maturity, short & stiff straw, resistance to loose smut & stem rust, et al.
•Acreage reached:
1944 – 72,459 1964 – 3,364,495
1949 – 5,596,200 1969 – 2,223,099
1959 – 6,341,167 1974 – 2,298,643
Triumph 64 Hard Red Winter Wheat
•Originally released by Mr. Danne in 1948 or 1949 as ‘Rust Resistant Triumph’; in 1964, was re-released by the OAES as ‘Triumph 64’.
•Tmp 64 is very similar to Triumph except for the rust resistance (which had been adapted to by PRT).
•Tmp 64 heads 10 to 11 days earlier than Turkey or Kharkof, which head about 2 weeks later and mature about 1 week later than wheats grown in Oklahoma today (Dr. Brett Carver, OSU Wheat Breeder).
Comparison of Heading and Cutting Dates
•Earliest (1940): heads – May 7th cut – June 19th
•Latest (1940): heads – May 17th cut – June 29th
•March 28th – wheat is approaching boot stage, and we will see heads by mid-April.”
•“Our earliest maturing varieties are quite likely a month earlier than those varieties popular back in the day of Joseph Danne.”
•“I don’t remember a year in the 18 I have been in Canadian County that at least some wheat wasn’t cut before Memorial Day – harvest in most years has a solid start by the last week of May.”
1940
2007 – Brad Tipton – Extension Educator, Canadian County
Burleigh, Schulze, and Eversmeyer. 1969. Some aspects of the summer & winter ecology of wheat rust fungi. Plant Dis. Rep. 53:648-651
Conclusions:
•PGT persist through the summer and fall months but no inoculum in any form detected after January of any year.
•PRT present continuously in the area studied.
Figure 1. Darkened area indicates where samples were taken during the 4-year study.
Chester, Ray, McLaughlin, and Hoffmaster. 1945. Diseases of field crops in Oklahoma. OAES Circular C-119, 23 pp.
Chester, K. S. 1942. The Nature and Prevention of Plant Diseases. The Blakiston Company, Philadelphia, 584 pp.
►PGT lives through the winter on wheat & produces uredospores in southern TX & Old Mexico; spring infections result from uredospores from the winter infections; teliospores are functionless.
►Stem rust in northern TX, OK, and southern KS is caused by uredospores blown in by south winds from southern TX and Old Mexico; teliospores are functionless.
►From northern KS to Canada, aeciospores from barberry and uredospores blown up from the south serve as inoculum; also teliospores may overwinter and lead to stem rust.
►In the southern Great Plains, varieties such as Early Blackhull escape stem rust because of their earliness.
Summary/Conclusions
►Historically, stem rust is more severe in TX and states north of Oklahoma.
►This is occurs for two reasons:
1. The early maturity of varieties grown in OK.
2. The inability of PGT to overwinter in OK.
►Because of these factors, stem rust in OK results from uredospores blown up from TX, which arrive too late in the spring to cause significant damage.
►Could this change?? Historically stripe rust has not been a problem in OK because of these same reasons. However, in three of the last six years, this has not been the case.
Popham, W.L. ???? Stem rust and thecommon barberry. USDA, Bureau ofEntomology and Plant Quarantine,Division of Plant Disease Control.
Popham, W.L. ???? Stem rust and the common barberry. USDA, Bureau ofEntomology and Plant Quarantine, Division of Plant Disease Control.