Journal of Fungi (2020), 6, 54.
Researcher
Description
Late wilt is a destructive disease of corn: outbreaks occur at the advanced growth stage
and lead to severe dehydration of susceptible hybrids. The disease’s causal agent is the fungus
Magnaporthiopsis maydis, whose spread relies on infested soils, seeds, and several alternative hosts.
The current study aimed at advancing our understanding of the nature of this plant disease and
revealing new ways to monitor and control it. Two field experiments were conducted in a heavily
infested area in northern Israel seeded with highly sensitive corn hybrid. The first experiment aimed
at inspecting the Azoxystrobin (AS) fungicide applied by spraying during and after the land tillage.
Unexpectedly, the disease symptoms in this field were minor and yields were high. Nevertheless,
up to 100% presence of the pathogen within the plant’s tissues was measured using the quantitative
real-time PCR method. The highest AS concentration tested was the most effective treatment, and
resulted in a 6% increase in cob yield and a 4% increase in A-class yield. In the second experiment
conducted in the following summer of the same year in a nearby field, the disease outbreak was
dramatically higher, with about 350 times higher levels of the pathogen DNA in the untreated plots’
plants. In this field, fungicide mixtures were applied using a dripline assigned for two coupling
rows. The most successful treatment was AS and the Difenoconazole mixture, in which the number
of infected plants decreased by 79%, and a 116% increase in crop yield was observed, along with a
41% increase in crop quality. Evaluation of the effectiveness of the treatments on the plants’ health
using a remote, thermal infra-red sensitive camera supported the results and proved to be an essential
research tool.
and lead to severe dehydration of susceptible hybrids. The disease’s causal agent is the fungus
Magnaporthiopsis maydis, whose spread relies on infested soils, seeds, and several alternative hosts.
The current study aimed at advancing our understanding of the nature of this plant disease and
revealing new ways to monitor and control it. Two field experiments were conducted in a heavily
infested area in northern Israel seeded with highly sensitive corn hybrid. The first experiment aimed
at inspecting the Azoxystrobin (AS) fungicide applied by spraying during and after the land tillage.
Unexpectedly, the disease symptoms in this field were minor and yields were high. Nevertheless,
up to 100% presence of the pathogen within the plant’s tissues was measured using the quantitative
real-time PCR method. The highest AS concentration tested was the most effective treatment, and
resulted in a 6% increase in cob yield and a 4% increase in A-class yield. In the second experiment
conducted in the following summer of the same year in a nearby field, the disease outbreak was
dramatically higher, with about 350 times higher levels of the pathogen DNA in the untreated plots’
plants. In this field, fungicide mixtures were applied using a dripline assigned for two coupling
rows. The most successful treatment was AS and the Difenoconazole mixture, in which the number
of infected plants decreased by 79%, and a 116% increase in crop yield was observed, along with a
41% increase in crop quality. Evaluation of the effectiveness of the treatments on the plants’ health
using a remote, thermal infra-red sensitive camera supported the results and proved to be an essential
research tool.