4.7 Article

Integrated Control of Root and Crown Rot in Sugar Beet: Combined Effects of Cultivar, Crop Rotation, and Soil Tillage

Journal

PLANT DISEASE
Volume 93, Issue 2, Pages 155-161

Publisher

AMER PHYTOPATHOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1094/PDIS-93-2-0155

Keywords

corn

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Rhizoctonia solani (AG 2-2IIIB), causing root and crown rot in sugar beet, poses all increasing problem in Europe. Agronomic measures have to lie optimized to control disease and minimize yield and quality loss, because no fungicides call be applied. Resistant sugar beet cultivars have been introduced to reduce disease occurrence. Furthermore. crop rotation can influence R. solani occurrence. In contrast to other cereals, maize serves as a host of the fungus. In order to study the combined effect of these factors, a series of four field trial,. was established with crop rotations varying in the proportion of maize and comparing a resistant with a susceptible sugar beet cultivar in 2001-02 in southern Germany. Within crop rotations, cultivation methods were varied in the form of soil tillage, intercrops, or both. Sugar beet cultivar and crop rotation had the main impact oil disease severity and sugar yield. With increasing proportion of maize, sugar yield decreased, whereas cultivation method had only a minor impact. Plowing directly before sugar beet increased sugar yield only within the unfavorable maize-maize-sugar beet rotation compared with mulching. These results Five strong evidence that crop rotation of sugar beet with nonhost plants and cultivation of resistant sugar beet cultivars are adequate means for integrated R. solani control.

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