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The effect of seed, furrow and stem base spray treatment with iprodione on white rot disease ( Sclerotium cepivorum ) in spring‐sown salad onions
Author(s) -
ENTWISTLE A. R.,
MUNASINGHE H. L.
Publication year - 1980
Publication title -
annals of applied biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.677
H-Index - 80
eISSN - 1744-7348
pISSN - 0003-4746
DOI - 10.1111/j.1744-7348.1980.tb03913.x
Subject(s) - iprodione , sclerotium , biology , horticulture , fungicide , agronomy
SUMMARY Seed treatment with iprodione at 125 and 150 g a.i./kg was superior to calomel seed treatment at 500 g a.i./kg in reducing disease losses and increasing yields in field experiments with salad onions infected with white rot; iprodione at 50, 62·5 and 100 g a.i./kg and thiophanate‐methyl at 150 g a.i./kg were as effective as calomel. Furrow treatment with iprodione or thiophanate‐methyl at 0·05 and 0·15 g a.i./m row or calomel at 0·5 g a.i./m row gave similar control as equivalent rates of seed treatment. Neither seed nor furrow treatments gave adequate control with prolonged exposure of the crop to the disease. A single stem base spray of iprodione at 0·0625 g a.i./m row applied 5 wk after drilling, reduced losses from 46% with a standard calomel seed treatment to 20%; increasing the stem base spray concentration to 0·25 g a.i./m row did not improve the control but resulted in a doubling of yields. The most effective control was obtained with iprodione applied as a seed treatment at 62·5 g a.i./kg combined with a single stem base spray at 0·0625 g a.i./m row 5 wk after drilling and this reduced losses to 6% compared with losses of 46% with calomel treated seed and 88% with untreated seed; increasing the stem base spray concentration did not improve control but resulted in higher yields.

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