Previous View
 
APSnet Home
 
Plant Disease Home


VIEW ARTICLE

Research.

Seven Years of Sclerotium rolfsii in Peanut Fields: Yield Losses and Means of Minimization. K. L. Bowen, Assistant Professor, Department of Plant Pathology, Alabama Agricultural Experiment Station and Alabama Cooperative Extension Service, Auburn University, Auburn, AL 36849. A. K. Hagan, and R. Weeks. Associate Professor (Extension Specialist), Department of Plant Pathology, and Associate Professor (Extension Specialist), Department of Entomology, Alabama Agricultural Experiment Station and Alabama Cooperative Extension Service, Auburn University, Auburn, AL 36849. Plant Dis. 76:982-985. Accepted for publication 8 May 1992. Copyright 1992 The American Phytopathological Society. DOI: 10.1094/PD-76-0982.

Yield losses in peanut (Arachis hypogaea) caused by southern stem rot were evaluated in growers’ fields at 44 individual sites over a 7-yr period from 1983 through 1989. Differential disease levels were obtained through different levels of infestation among sites and applications of pesticides, including PCNB, chlorpyrifos, ethoprop, diniconazole, tebuconazole, propiconazole, and fonofos. Peanut yields were reduced by 2.9 or 0.9% for each locus or “hit” of southern stem rot disease per 30.5-m row; losses were greater when the crop was stressed by high temperatures. Yields of untreated plots averaged 785 kg/ha less than those of plots receiving the best treatments. Yield potential was shown to be greater with the use of newly developed pesticides and fungicide/insecticide combinations than potential estimated from loss models developed 20 yr ago.

Keyword(s): groundnut, white mold.