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PRESS RELEASEFor immediate releaseContact: Amanda Aranowski Scab Disease Causes Serious Damage to Small Grain CropsSt. Paul, MN (May 1, 1999) - Six successive years of disease have taken
their toll on many small grain farmers in the Red River Valley of North
Dakota, Minnesota, and Manitoba. This extended episode is bringing ruin
to many farmers in the region. Additional outbreaks in Midwestern and
Eastern states of the USA as well as Central and Eastern Canada are leaving
thousands of farmers searching for solutions. The culprit responsible
for the vast devastation is Fusarium head blight, more commonly known
as scab. This all consuming fungal disease shrivels the kernels of small
grains such as wheat, rye and barley, significantly reducing yields. "Moisture, at the time of flowering, is the main stimulus necessary
for scab," says Robert W. Stack, plant pathologist at North Dakota
State University and a member of The American Phytopathological Society.
"If a wet environment exists for an extended period, even with low
levels of the fungus in the field or temperatures that arent usually
favorable to disease development, severe scab disease can result."
During the first part of this century, scab was considered a major threat
to wheat and barley and recently it has resurfaced worldwide increasing
in intensity. A succession of "wet cycle" years beginning in
1993 are linked to the current scab epidemic. According to the United
States Department of Agriculture (USDA), "From 1991 to 1997, American
farmers lost 470 million bushels of wheat, worth $2.6 billion, because
of the scab epidemic." These substantial losses recently provoked
a national response resulting in the development of the "US Wheat
and Barley Scab Initiative," a consortium of scientists and agribusiness
leaders working together to solve the scab epidemic. For more information on scab, visit the APS feature story with photographs and links to additional sites at www.apsnet.org/education/feature/FHB/Top.htm. The American Phytopathological Society (APS) is a professional scientific organization dedicated to the study and control of plant disease with 5,000 members worldwide.
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