Taking an environmentally sensitive approach to pest management
In 2021, the MU Plant Diagnostic Clinic received seven soybean samples diagnosed with Cercospora Leaf Blight (CLB). These disease samples were collected from the counties including Vernon, Cooper, Montgomery, Chickasaw, Clark, and Johnson, and most of them were submitted to the MU Plant Diagnostic Clinic toward the end of the growing season. Symptoms of this disease present as severe leaf dropping and premature death. In addition to CLB, we also found other diseases such as charcoal rot, potassium deficiency and anthracnose present on several soybean samples.
The causal agent of this disease is a fungus called Cercospora kikuchii. The symptom of this disease begins as purple, brownish spots on leaves. As it progresses, these leaf spots deepen in color and combine to form large necrotic areas that eventually lead to premature defoliation (Figure 1). In addition to significant yield loss resulted from defoliation, this disease can also cause purple seed stain which severely affects the product quality (Figure 2). Cercospora kikuchii produces septate conidiophores with size of 200-300 µm long and 4-5 µm wide while the size of conidia is 170 to 190 µm long and 3 µm wide.
This disease can survive in plant debris left over from the previous season and unclean seeds. When the weather becomes humid and warm in the spring, the fungus begins to produce spores (conidia) that can be spread to the newly planted soybeans with the help of wind or rain splash, and infect whatever tissue they land on (Figure 3). Once the blight symptoms developed on the leaves, more conidia on the necrotic areas are produced and infect other leaves, stem and seed pod (Figure 4). CLB can also be transmitted by planting a seed infected with the pathogen. Previous studies show that while the symptoms appear on the coat, mycelium of C. kikuchii can penetrate the cotyledonary and embryonic tissues. Based on the communications with the clients this year, this disease progressed very fast and normally caused severe defoliation within two to three weeks.
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REVISED: November 3, 2021