Thursday, September 1, 2011

Program '11 Update: Stress

A lot has happened since the last update I posted on July 22. We had record attendance of 650 at our NC State Turfgrass Field Day on August 10. Classes are in session, conference season is starting up, and we had an earthquake AND a hurricane in one week. I sincerely hope that everyone who was in the path of Hurricane Irene escaped severe damage.

From mid July to mid August was hot, humid, and stressful for bentgrass putting greens in North Carolina, with 18 days above 95 and 6 days above 100. The low temperature only dipped below 70 degrees once during this time.

We've made several changes to Program '11 in response to the prevailing weather patterns. In response to the severe stress imposed by the weather conditions, we decided to apply Signature + Daconil on August 1 instead of Stellar + Daconil. On August 15, the weather was cooling off and we decided to drop the Alude application and applied Spectro alone.

On August 29, in the wake of Irene, we applied Honor instead of Subdue + Fore. While there was some potential for Pythium root rot development in these wet conditions, we were more concerned about the explosion of dollar spot and brown patch we were observing in untreated areas on the research farm.


All of the programs have continued to provide excellent disease control. No significant amounts of dollar spot, brown patch, anthracnose, or Pythium root rot have been observed in the treated plots. The Bayer Program has continued to express more yellow spot symptoms as I reported in July. This program contains a lot of QoI fungicides, which we've found increase the intensity of yellow spot symptoms.

On July 25, Program 13, NC State Program, BASF Program and Program '11 all exhibited excellent turf quality. Beginning in early to mid July, all programs declined in their turf quality, except for the BASF program which actually continued to slightly improve. Plots treated with the BASF Program has significantly better turf quality than all others on August 16 and 22. The Syngenta Program improved in its turf quality and by August 29 was statistically similar to the BASF Program while all the others were significantly lower.

It is difficult to determine why the BASF Program held up so well during the hot and humid conditions of early July. These plots were treated with a tank-mixture of Segway, Iprodione Pro, and Daconil Ultrex on August 8, which may have helped to control some underlying Pythium root rot or other disease. Perhaps the application of Honor on July 11 helped to precondition the bentgrass for the oncoming stress as BASF promotes.

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