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Crop and Pasture Science Crop and Pasture Science Society
Plant sciences, sustainable farming systems and food quality

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This article has been peer reviewed and accepted for publication. It is in production and has not been edited, so may differ from the final published form.

Taking shortcuts: lowering harvest height to restrict colonisation of cereal stubble by Fusarium pseudograminearum

Toni Petronaitis 0000-0003-1559-6073, Clayton Forknall 0000-0002-4267-3532, Steven Simpfendorfer, David Backhouse, Richard Flavel

Abstract

Context: Many wheat producers are increasing the biomass of cereal stubble retained after harvest through the adoption of stripper front harvesters which result in taller standing stubble. Aims: We investigated whether taller stubble affects the survival and dispersal of Fusarium pseudograminearum (Fp), the causative agent of Fusarium crown rot (FCR). Methods: Field experiments at 2 sites in northern New South Wales were run for 3 years to investigate if taller cereal stubble in year 1 facilitated additional Fp colonisation, and subsequent effects on dispersal of Fp inoculum from chickpea harvest in year 2 and FCR infection and expression in cereal crops in year 3. Culturing and quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) methods assessed Fp colonisation and future disease risks. Key results: In taller cereal stubble, Fp colonised an additional 91-92% of the stubble length in the 6-months post-harvest and persisted at higher levels for at least 1 year compared to the shorter cereal stubble. Cutting cereal stubble short (in year 1) therefore successfully restricted further colonisation by Fp. Significant displacement of Fp in the crown 6 months post-harvest resulted in significant decreases in Fp DNA overall, however, long-term survival of Fp was observed 10-20 cm above the crown. Conclusions: Different residue management scenarios did not increase FCR risk for year 3, likely due to high inoculum levels across all treatments and unseasonably wet conditions in years 2-3. Implications: We provide important field-validation of Fp colonisation in standing cereal stubble and discuss implications for FCR management across regions and seasons.

CP24365  Accepted 16 March 2025

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