M.R. Fernandez, H. Wang, H. Cutforth, R. Lemke
Canadian Journal of Plant Science 96 (5), 895-907, (5 April 2016) https://doi.org/10.1139/cjps-2015-0266
KEYWORDS: wheat, rotation, tillage, fallow, green manure, leaf spots, tan spot, septoria leaf blotch, Precipitation, temperature, blé, assolement, travail du sol, jachère, engrais vert, tache foliaire, helminthosporiose, septoriose, précipitations, température
Leaf spots (LS) of wheat continue to be widespread in western Canada. Most registered cultivars do not have a good level of resistance, thus it is important to evaluate the impact of agronomic practices. This study examined LS severity of spring wheat in a cropping sequence trial under conservation tillage, and compared it to results from two other agronomic trials conducted under different environmental conditions in the same area two decades earlier. In the present study, wheat grown after fallow generally had lower LS severity than wheat grown after another wheat crop, regardless of the sequence, with wheat grown after non-cereals (crop or green manure) having among the lowest disease levels. In most cases there were no differences in disease within phases of each sequence. Grain yield was highest in wheat grown after fallow or green manure than in wheat grown after another wheat, regardless of the sequence. Some of these results were different than those reported from studies conducted before, under conventional or conservation tillage, in particular in regards to disease levels after a fallow year, and the frequency of Pyrenophora tritici-repentis and Phaeosphaeria nodorum. Climatic conditions in the years of the present study (2010–2013) were different than when the previous studies were conducted (1993–1996), especially in regards to temperatures over the previous fall/winter and precipitation in the growing season, which were all higher in the most recent period. How these differences might have affected the survival and reproduction of the LS pathogens, and disease development, are discussed.