Eradu-patch of Lupinus angustifolius: Effects of fungicides in vitro on the causal Rhizoctoniasp. and on the root disease in the field
W. J. MacLeod
Australasian Plant Pathology 30(3) 239 - 243
Abstract
Eradu-patch is a new disease of lupins caused by a thin, binucleate
Rhizoctonia (TBR) and is expressed as severely stunted
patches in lupin crops. A laboratory experiment to determine the toxicity of
selected fungicides to the TBR found that growth was prevented by
tolclofos-methyl at 5 and 10 μg mL –1 and
inhibited by iprodione at 10 μg mL –1 but
not by either furalaxyl or benomyl at concentrations up to 10 μg mL
–1 . A selective medium for isolation of the TBR
from infected root tissue was developed and tested. In the field, Eradu-patch
symptoms were not evident following fumigation (methyl bromide-chloropicrin).
Following a soil drench treatment with iprodione at 10 g
m–2 , growth inside patches was increased but was
less than one-quarter of that realised following the fumigation treatment.
Soil drenches of tolclofos-methyl (1 g m –2 ),
furalaxyl (1 g m –2 ) and benomyl (1 g m
–2 ) did not increase the growth of lupins inside
patches. Neither of the treatments that increased plant growth inside patches
are commercially viable control strategies for this disease. Control
strategies to be implemented by growers will need to be developed through
cultural practices that may be enhanced by low cost chemical strategies.
Full text doi:10.1071/AP01037
© CSIRO 2001





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