See more from this Session: Graduate Student Oral Competition: Turf Disease Management and Fungicide Fate
Monday, November 1, 2010: 10:30 AM
Long Beach Convention Center, Room 102C, First Floor
Typhula incarnata Fr. (TI) and Microdochium nivale Fr. (MN) are important psychrophilic pathogens of cool-season turfgrasses. Existing field data suggests that K fertilization may affect disease severity, warranting additional experimentation under controlled conditions. In a greenhouse, annual bluegrass [Poa annua var. reptans (Hauskn) Timm.] was seeded into 120 – 30 x 10 cm diam. sand filled columns. Nitrogen (0.5 g m2 ), K (0.5 g m2), and all other plant essential nutrients (PENS) were applied weekly for 90 d. Following establishment, weekly application rates of N and PENS remained constant, yet 5 different K treatments (0, 0.25, 0.5, 2, 3 g m2) were imposed for 90 d. Columns were then moved to a refrigerated room, maintained under a photosynthetically active radiation flux of ~300 υmol m-2 s-1, and day/night air temperature incrementally decreased every 7 d over 28 d (10/4°C, 4/-2°C, 2/-4°C, -2/-6°C). Plants were then buried under 10 cm of snow and kept under darkness at -4°C for 28 d. After thawing at 2°C, 8 replicates of each K TRT were inoculated with a 10 mm agar disc taken from TI, MN, or sterile cultures. Columns were incubated at 2°C (40 d) then 4°C (45 d) under periodic misting and evaluated for % necrotic turf every 10 d. Survival analysis of days to 50% necrosis (Day50) was used to quantify disease progression. The experiment was conducted twice and data was pooled. Potassium treatment significantly affected Day50 in TI (Pr>χ2 =0.007) but not MN (Pr>χ2 =0.277) inoculated turf. Regression of Day50 by tissue K content at time of inoculation revealed an inverse linear relationship in both TI (Pr>F=0.0009, r2=0.98) and MN (Pr>F=0.08, r2=0.69) inoculated turf. Additional experimental data suggests that K fertilization affects psychrophilic pathogen susceptibility by modifying metabolic rate and/or fate of metabolic intermediates.
See more from this Division: C05 Turfgrass ScienceSee more from this Session: Graduate Student Oral Competition: Turf Disease Management and Fungicide Fate