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Cultural, Organic, and Biological Methods for Snow Mold Control on Putting Greens in the Intermountain West
Author(s) -
Van Dyke Adam,
Johnson Paul G.
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
crop, forage and turfgrass management
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.29
H-Index - 10
ISSN - 2374-3832
DOI - 10.2134/cftm2017.04.0030
Subject(s) - snow , snow removal , environmental science , mold , compaction , fertilizer , agronomy , biology , geography , geology , meteorology , botany , geotechnical engineering
Core Ideas Topdressing every 2 wk reduced snow mold severity by 11% compared with every 4 wk in 1 of 2 yr. This cultural practice should be evaluated further for managing winter diseases. Compacting snow with snowshoes reduced snow mold severity 3% the first year but had no effect the second year when damage occurred before snow could be compacted. Organic fertilizers, biological materials, and the compost did not provide adequate control of snow molds. A mineral oil was the only nonfungicidal commercial product to have efficacy on snow molds. Turf treated with traditional fungicides PCNB and propiconazole prior to snow cover had the best control of snow molds.Snow mold pathogens can damage golf course turf in winter, and few alternatives to fungicides currently exist for effective control. Cultural strategies including sand topdressing frequency and snow compaction using snowshoes, in combination with organic and biological commercially available products, were evaluated for snow mold control on a putting green for two seasons. Sand topdressing every 2 wk during the growing season reduced snow mold severity 11% in 2010, and compacting snow in winter reduced severity by 3%. Neither cultural practice reduced damage in 2011, when pressure from snow molds was higher. Most organic and biological materials did not suppress snow molds in either year relative to the fertilizer control, whereas turf treated with traditional fungicides provided the best control. A mineral oil was the only alternative material to have efficacy on snow molds, providing 54% control in 2010 and 34% control in 2011.