Wheat Scab (Fusarium Head Blight) Widespread in South Central and Eastern Nebraska

Wheat Scab (Fusarium Head Blight) Widespread in South Central and Eastern Nebraska

Photo of a wheat field with white heads caused by scab, York County, June 11. Photo of a section of wheat showing severe epidemic of scab, York County, June 11.
Figure 1. Photo of white heads caused by scab in a wheat field in York County, June 11. Figure 4. A section of a wheat field showing a severe epidemic of scab in York County, June 11.
Photo of wheat scab
Figure 2. Photo of white heads caused by scab in a wheat field in York County, June 11.
Photo of wheat scab
Figure 3. Bleaching can spread until the entire wheat head appears white.

June 15, 2007

 

During the last two weeks there have been reports of bleached or white heads in wheat fields in south central and eastern Nebraska (Figure 1). A survey of wheat fields in Saline, Saunders, Holt and York counties from June 7 to June 11 revealed that these symptoms are caused mainly by Fusarium head blight, also known as head scab.

Potential Effects of Toxins from Scab

The Fusarium fungus can produce mycotoxins, most likely deoxynivalenol (DON, vomitoxin) and zearalenone, but not fumonisins. Of the first two, vomitoxin was found to be more prevalent than zearalenone in the wheat scab infection of 1982. Fumonisins have not been found in scabby wheat because
  1. the species of Fusarium mold that produces fumonisins is not the same as that which causes wheat scab,
  2. the weather conditions favorable to wheat scab do not favor fumonisin production and
  3. fumonisins are usually found in corn, not wheat.

The presence of zearalenone would be of greater concern than the presence of vomitoxin. Zearalenone acts like estrogen, the female sex hormone and can affect the reproductive cycle of breeding females, especially pigs. Ruminants are not as sensitive to the effects of zearalenone as are non-ruminants.

Vomitoxin is not very toxic, but it is associated with feed refusal in pigs and can affect performance of feeder hogs. Feeder steers and heifers are not adversely affected by vomitoxin in the diet, according to feeding trials conducted in the mid 1980s.

Use of feed contaminated with either zearalenone or vomitoxin is not regulated by governmental agencies, although the U.S. Food and Drug Administration issued the following advisories for use of vomitoxin-contaminated feed stuffs:

  1.  

  2. 10 ppm DON on grains and grain by-products destined for ruminating beef and feedlot cattle older than four months and for chickens with the added recommendation that these ingredients not exceed 50% of the diet of cattle or chickens.
  3. 5 ppm DON on grains and grain by-products destined for swine with the added recommendation that these ingredients not exceed 20% of their diet.
  4. 5 ppm DON on grains and grain by-products destined for all other animals with the added recommendation that these ingredients not exceed 40% of their diet.

Recommendations for use of zearalenone-contaminated feed have not been issued by the FDA, but one set of recommendations from a veterinary toxicology reference are:

  1. < 1 ppm in the diet of pre-pubertal gilts
  2. < 3 ppm in the diet of sexually mature or bred sows
  3. < 20 ppm in the diet of young boars
  4. < 200 ppm in the diet of mature boars
  5. < 10 ppm in virgin heifers

Michael Carlson
Diagnostic Toxicologist/Analytical Chemist
UNL Veterinary Diagnostic Center

 

This disease is caused by several species of the fungus Fusarium and is favored by wet weather during the growing season. The fungus also causes stalk and ear rots in corn and seedling blights in cereals.

It survives in the soil or on stubble of host crops such as corn, wheat and grasses. Scab is more severe in reduced or no-till fields, especially when wheat follows corn.

Spores of the scab fungus are abundant, especially during wet weather, and are carried to wheat heads by air currents. Most infections occur during flowering because anthers and pollen serve as a food source for the fungus.

A distinctive symptom of the disease is premature bleaching of one or more spikelets (Figure 2) or the entire immature head. The bleaching can start anywhere on the head and then spread (Figure 3) until the entire head is bleached.

Bleached spikelets are sterile or contain shriveled and/or discolored seed. During humid conditions, white or pink fungal growth with orange spore masses may be seen on bleached spikelets. Sexual blue-black fruiting structures also can form, giving the head a scabbed appearance, hence the name scab.

Fusarium also can be transmitted through infected seed and cause severe seedling blight under favorable conditions for disease development.

During warm temperatures (77°F to 86°F), blight symptoms on heads appear within three days after infection. A crop that appeared healthy a few days earlier can suddenly show widespread symptoms. Disease incidence (percentage of infected heads) can approach 100% in parts of a field (Figure 4) or in entire fields in cases of severe epidemics.

White heads resulting from scab infection cannot be pulled easily from the sheath of the flag leaf in contrast to white heads caused by damage from the wheat stem maggot.

In recent years scab has not been common in Nebraska due to drier than normal conditions. The current epidemics are due to the unusually wet weather this growing season.

In addition to lowering yield and grain quality, the scab fungus can produce mycotoxins (see box).

Management. Scab can be managed by planting tolerant cultivars, crop rotation out of cereals or grasses, fungicide seed treatments, and foliar fungicide applications which should be timed to prevent infections during flowering.

Stephen Wegulo
Extension Plant Pathologist, Lincoln

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