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Control of white mould not always easy in lentils

Not always easy in lentils

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Fungicide control generally ineffective. Research at the Crop Development Centre at the University of Saskatchewan in Saskatoon has shown that controlling sclerotinia white mould in lentils with fungicides is difficult. The researchers, using the same fungicide application strategy for lentil as is used for control of sclerotinia stem rot in canola, found that fungicides did not control the disease in lentils.

"In canola, the infection tends to occur on the senescing flower petals that, when dropping and landing on green tissue, leads to infection of the canola plants," explains Dr. Sabine Banniza, associate professor of plant pathology at the university. "Growers will spray at flowering and get control of the infection because flower petals remain free of the fungus. This is not the case with lentil."

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Research shows fungicide control of white mould is ineffective. Photo Courtesy Of CDC Saskatoon.
Banniza and her team investigated management strategies for controlling white mould in lentil using fungicides and plant density. What they discovered, during two years and in two locations, is that the infection most often affects lentils late in the growing season, so spraying fungicides at the flowering stage is not an effective control.

"We began by applying the same control strategies to lentils as we would do with canola, but we discovered they didn't work," admits Banniza. "In fact, what we learned with lentils through experiments in growth chambers is that the flowers aren't the only way the fungus can infect the plant."

The research also showed that the plants become more susceptible to disease as they age, leaving them more prone to disease infection in the fall prior to harvest. "We also learned that spraying later, when the fungus is present, is ineffective because the spray cannot penetrate the dense canopy to the lower leaves and stems where the fungus will thrive," Banniza continues. In short, fungicide applications did not reduce the severity of the infection and had no influence on yield.

Mark Kuchuran, technical development specialist with BASF in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, agrees that getting control of white mould in lentils after canopy closure is difficult. BASF markets Lance, a fungicide registered for control of white mould in lentils. The label for Lance recommends application at the beginning of flowering, with a second application seven to 14 days later if the disease persists or weather conditions are favourable for disease development.

"In our research trials, white mould control was effective if you could get canopy penetration. But after the canopy closed in, we saw control drop off with later applications," explains Kuchuran.

Fortunately, white mould does not occur every season, but the ideal conditions appear to be a dense canopy and late season rain that does not allow the crop to dry out. According to the research, this creates an optimum atmosphere for the fungus to attack the plant. But, by then it will be too late to spray for control. If the autumn weather conditions are dry and the canopy is dense, white mould is unlikely to appear in the crop.

Kuchuran says that Lance needs to be used as a preventative spray, so if the conditions for white mould disease development exist before canopy closure, he recommends a Lance application. "That's pretty tough for farmers to do, to apply a fungicide without seeing any disease symptoms," he says. "There's not much you can do, though, about the disease when it develops later in the season as it is almost impossible to penetrate a dense lentil canopy."

Banniza says that a late season rain can be the deciding factor on whether white mould develops. "I would have a difficult time recommending fungicide to control sclerotinia white mould in lentils, particularly late in the season," she says.

Resistant cultivars are the next great hope
The answer, according to the researchers, is to breed white mould resistant cultivars and, although this work is ongoing, there are only small successes so far. "New options may be available with the herbicide (IMI) tolerant lentil (Clearfield lentil) varieties," Banniza suggests. "They would allow for seeding at lower plant density that would result in a lighter canopy so the crop could dry out. This could prevent infections with white mould. Also, a more open canopy may make later fungicide sprays more effective."

The researchers realize that by answering one question, they are facing several more. With a much better understanding of how the fungus infects lentil plants, there may be other approaches to disease management that could be tested on lentil to control white mould. Agronomic strategies could play a role in reducing the possibilities of infection as well.

"It's understandable that farmers are concerned about sclerotinia white mould as a yield reducer," says Banniza. "There's no question that severe infections affect quality and quantity." However, her research shows there is no effective means of getting the commonly used fungicides for control into the lentil crop at the time when the disease shows up. Fortunately, white mould only becomes an issue in lentils late in the season and only if the conditions are right.

While Banniza's research has answered some important questions about effective white mould control in lentils, it also has raised more. This leaves growers at the mercy of the weather and the hope that conditions are never right for white mould to reduce their lentil yield - at least until new cultivars are developed, or Banniza and her colleagues are able to develop other disease management strategies.