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Return of an Old Problem:
Fusarium Head Blight of Small
Grains
Robert W. Stack, Plant Pathology Dept. North Dakota State Univ.
Introduction
Fusarium head blight (FHB) of small grains
(a.k.a."Scab") was first described just over a century ago and considered a
major threat to wheat and barley during the early years of this century (6).
In recent years FHB has again increased worldwide (28). The International
Maize and Wheat Improvement Center (CIMMYT) has identified FHB as a
major factor limiting wheat production in many parts of the world (7).
During the past decade, several European conferences on Fusarium diseases have been
dominated by reports on FHB of cereals. The most recent (1997) of these was attended by
scientists from 28 countries on five continents (22). A 1996 conference on
FHB sponsored by CIMMYT also had worldwide participation (7).

Fig. 1. Occurrence of FHB in the USA 1991-1996. |
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Within the last dozen years there
have been outbreaks of FHB in the Midwestern and Eastern states of the USA, as well as in
Central and Eastern Canada. The most extended recent episode has been in the spring grain
region of the upper Midwest, centered on the Red River Valley of North Dakota, Minnesota,
and Manitoba that has experienced six consecutive years of disease. Losses have been
large, and accumulated loss has
brought ruin to many farmers in the region (18). The impact of FHB on
the American wheat and barley industries in recent years has been sufficiently great to
provoke a national response. A consortium of scientists and agribusiness leaders has
developed a "US Wheat and Barley Scab Initiative" to target funding to solving
this disease problem. Many information resources about FHB and current research on the
disease can be accessed through their web site. The FHB situation in North America was
reviewed in feature articles in Plant Disease in1994 (3) and
again in 1997 (18). Aspects of FHB worldwide also have been reviewed (28,
7). The world literature on FHB is immense;
fortunately, much of it can be accessed through the bibliographic web site maintained by the
USDA Cereal Disease Lab in St.Paul, MN.
The
Pathogen
Several species of the soil- and residue-borne
fungus Fusarium are capable of inciting FHB. In parts of Northern Europe, for
example, F. culmorum and F. avenaceum are the prevalent causes
(8, 28). It is F. graminearum (FG),
however, that has caused most of the recent outbreaks of FHB in the USA and Canada, as
well as those in South America, Southern and Central Europe, China and Japan. In addition
to small grain crops, FG has a wide host range among grasses. The name, in fact, means
Fusarium "of the grasses". FG is also a superb colonizer of compromised or
weakened plants of all sorts. FG has been recorded from dozens of crops and it is a
particularly efficient colonizer of senescent maize stalks (42).
Natural populations of F. graminearum and F. culmorum show considerable
variability, but host specific strains have not been demonstrated (8, 21,
20).

Fig. 2. Gibberella zeae ascospores.

Fig. 3. Gibberella zeae perithecia on maize kernels.
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Most species of Fusarium are spread by
dispersal of conidiospores that are blown or splashed to new infection courts. Among the
species causing FHB, FG has an additional epidemiological advantage because it regularly
and abundantly forms its sexual stage (Gibberella zeae). Ascospores produced by
this stage are forcibly shot into the air, which greatly increases the ability of the
fungus to disperse from colonized residue where perithecia form (14, 9).
Where G. zeae is the principal cause of FHB, ascospores are believed to be the
principal primary inoculum in nature; however, both ascospores and conidiospores are
effective as inoculum (33). Even if no FHB was present, the crop residue may
be colonized after harvest providing carryover inoculum. Inoculation of field nurseries by
spreading infested grain instead of naturally infested residue has been used by Chinese
cereal breeders (39), and more recently in many North American screening
nurseries testing for FHB resistance in wheat and barley. When maize is grown in the same region as small
grains, as in the central United States, for example, senescent maize stalks are subject
to massive colonization by FG. One Minnesota study found over 80% of the maize
stalk residue was occupied by FG in the fall and that
FG still controlled over 60% the following
spring (42). This colonized residue provides a site for abundant
sporulation during the next growing season and beyond (14). The
saprobic part of the life cycle of F. graminearum is fueled by maize residue.
Numerous observations, spanning six decades, indicate that when maize production moves
into a small grain production area, occurrence of FG and the risk of FHB increase
(15, 34, 27, 35). The mixture of
maize, wheat and barley production, especially when combined with widespread use of
reduced tillage and increased residue retention, sets the stage for major epidemics of FHB
in small grains whenever weather favoring disease occurs during small grain heading and
flowering (41).

Fig. 4. FHB Symptoms on barley heads.

Fig. 5. "Scabby" tombstone kernels of wheat.
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Infection occurs when spores land on
susceptible heads of wheat, rye, or barley. The flowering stage for wheat or rye and the
newly emerged heads of barley (which flowers before heads emerge from the boot) are the
most susceptible, but heads at later stages also can be infected.
The earliest infections generally
kill the florets and no kernel develops at that point. Florets infected later may bear
partially developed infected kernels, ("scabby" or "tombstone"
kernels). Infections which occur after the kernels are filled may hardly affect kernel
development, but such seemingly normal grains can harbor the fungus and may contain
significant levels of trichothecene mycotoxins (4, 11, 32).
Epidemiology
There seems little doubt that the overriding
limitation to FHB is moisture. Given a wet environment for an extended
time, even a low inoculum level or a suboptimal temperature may not
prevent FHB. The importance of extended wet periods favoring FHB
was recognized early in the study of disease (29, 13), and such observations have been made many
times since (18, 37). A succession
of "wet cycle" years beginning in 1993 with much above
average June and July rainfall has been linked to the protracted FHB
epidemic in the Northern spring wheat region of the USA (17).
Fig 6. Comparison of high
June-July rainfall in "scab years" in the spring
wheat region. (click image for a larger view) |
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Axel Anderson, using the extensive
epidemiological resources at the US Army Biological Warfare Lab at Ft.
Detrick, MD, was
one of the first to quantify the relationship between temperature, moisture and FHB
(1). It takes large differences in inoculum to produce measurable changes in
FHB; one study found that a10-fold increase in inoculum caused only a two-fold increase
in disease (33). Attempts to make use of the relationship between occurrence of
moisture and plant development to forecast FHB have been made in the past
(25) and more recently (24). Possible development of FHB
forecasting is another research priority of the US Wheat and Barley Scab Initiative.
Chemical
Control
Strong interest in use of fungicide sprays for
control of FHB continues but the complete answer remains elusive. Timing and application
are critical and additional products and technologies are needed (17). At present in North America, the best fungicide applications may provide a 50-60%
reduction in FHB with a concomitant reduction in damaged kernels. Given present low
commodity prices for cereal grains, this may not be an economic return in many cases
(12). In Europe, with its different
production cost structure for small grains, fungicide control of FHB has been studied more
extensively (7). Fungicide applications may also
reduce mycotoxin contamination in grain by 25-50% (5), but sometimes
no fungicide treatment was at all effective (23). Improvement in FHB
control by fungicide application is one of the priorities of the "US National Wheat
and Barley Scab Initiative."
Resistance

Fig. 7. Inoculated wheat heads illustrating
the expression of "Type II" resistance.
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Resistance to FHB and its genetics has been the
subject of two extensive recent reviews (21, 20). As far back as the 1920’s,
plant pathologists and breeders observed that wheat genotypes seemed to
differ in susceptibility to FHB, although it was difficult to clearly
separate this from disease escape due to differences in maturity (13).
Extensive research at the University of Minnesota extending from the 1920’s
into the 1950’s laid the groundwork for much of our present knowledge
about FHB resistance (10, 30). Unfortunately, this work was not continued,
or we might be in a much better position to deal with this disease today
(41).
Into the
early 1960’s there was also major research on FHB in Japan but the
effort given to wheat declined after that time (26). Japanese scientists
have continued a strong program on FHB resistance in barley (36). Research
on FHB resistance began in China in the 1950’s and has continued since
(16). In Europe, research on FHB resistance has been active in several
countries, notably Hungary, Poland, Austria, Germany, and the Netherlands
(21, 20, 31).
When FHB resistance in wheat is discussed today,
the topic of "Types of Resistance" is sure to arise. This concept was introduced
by Schroeder and Christensen (30) and subsequently expanded by Mesterhazy
(21). As the
"Types" of resistance are described, they reflect the way each shows up in the
plant. Perhaps "Expressions" or "Manifestations" of resistance would
more correctly reflect the idea. Meidaner (20) used the term "Components of
Resistance", but some plant breeders might feel that this could be confused with
yield components. Whatever the objections to use of such terms, efforts at breeding for
resistance probably have been sharpened by the distinctions so indicated. One example is
the selective targeting of Type II resistance by the spikelet inoculation method
(39, 38).
Following Mesterhazy’s (21) usage, the expressions of resistance are: I,
resistance to primary infection; II, resistance to subsequent colonization
after infection; III resistance expressed in the developing kernel; IV
reduced accumulation of mycotoxins; V, yield tolerance. Other types also
might exist. Evidence for expressions of types I, II, and III is quite
strong and has been reported on numerous occasions as reviewed by
Mesterhazy (21) and Meidaner (20). A good practical indicator of type I
resistance is reduced incidence of infection. This needs to be determined
in comparative trials using moderate airborne inoculum and under
moderately favorable environmental conditions, since Type I resistance can
be easily overwhelmed (30). Type II resistance has been the most studied
in recent times. It is easy to detect, and good sources of it are well
known. The single floret or single spikelet inoculation method selectively
distinguishes this type of resistance (39). Type III, kernel resistance,
manifests itself by a reduction in occurrence of Fusarium damaged kernels
(tombstones). Each of these resistances is believed to be conditioned by
multiple genes showing additive effects (20). The search for DNA markers
("quantitative trait loci" or QTL) for FHB resistance is
actively underway in several laboratories, as two current papers show (2,
38).
Much less is known about resistance type IV,
reduced mycotoxin accumulation. Some have challenged whether it even exists as a separate
type or is just an expression of the effect of other factors, genetic or environmental.
The work of Hart et al. (11), however, is suggestive in this regard. Resistance to
mycotoxin accumulation in otherwise sound grain is a major goal in some barley breeding
efforts (R. C. Horsley, barley breeder, North Dakota State Univ., Fargo, ND,
personal
communication 1999).
Yield tolerance is the ability of a plant to
produce a crop even in the presence of disease at a level that would debilitate most other
lines. Yield tolerance is well documented in some other plant disease systems, but
evidence for it in FHB (as type V) is largely circumstantial, although a number of
researchers believe it to occur (21).
The expression of resistance of each of these
types may well involve several different physiological mechanisms, since multiple genes on
different chromosomes are known (2, 38). In addition to
these types of physiological resistance there are many other heritable traits which may
directly or indirectly affect the plant's risk of exposure to Fusarium. Such traits
as head type, phenology, trapped anthers, plant stature, rate of filling, to name just a
few, have been implicated as influencing the level of FHB (20, 28).
The
Future
While
it may seem to some that little has changed since the 1920’s in regard
to conquering FHB, we are on the threshold of major breakthroughs. Methods
and technologies unheard of in those days are being used to solve this
persistent disease problem. Highly active and even curative fungicides
have been discovered, and application technologies are far more
sophisticated than ever before. Molecular marker-assisted plant breeding
for quantitatively inherited characters is already a reality, and is being
extended to breeding for FHB resistance. In the nearer term, several
wheat-breeding programs are ready to launch cultivars that are truly FHB
resistant, developed by conventional breeding methods. There is every
reason to expect that the history of FHB in the first decades of the 21st
century will be quite different than anything in the 20th.
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