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RESEARCH ARTICLE

Long-term effects of stubble management on the incidence of infection of wheat by Fusarium graminearum Schw. Group 1

LW Burgess, D Backhouse, BA Summerell, AB Pattison, TA Klein, RJ Esdaile and G Ticehurst

Australian Journal of Experimental Agriculture 33(4) 451 - 456
Published: 1993

Abstract

The effect of 3 stubble management regimes (burning after harvest, incorporation with a disc plough, retention on the surface) on the incidence of infection of wheat with Fusarium graminearum Schw. Group 1 was studied for 5 seasons at 2 sites at Moree, New South Wales. One site had high initial incidence (site A) and the other low initial incidence (site B). There were no differences in incidence of infection between retained and incorporated treatments. Stubble burning reduced the increase in incidence of infection in 2 of 5 years at site A and 3 of 4 years at site B. Failure of control in other years was attributed to susceptible weed hosts and poor burns. When stubble was retained on the plots at site B that had been burnt, incidence of infection in the next season increased to a level not significantly different from the retained or incorporated treatments. Incidence of infection at the fourth consecutive wheat crop at both sites was close to the maximum recorded, which was 92% at site A and 65% at site B. There was no evidence of a decline in incidence by the time of the most recent season assessed (eighth year of continuous wheat cultivation at site A, and sixth year at site B). In most years, the differences in yield between treatments were not significant.

https://doi.org/10.1071/EA9930451

© CSIRO 1993

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