A synoptic approach for crop loss assessment used to study wheat. VI. The pathogen data and their relationship to soil and cultural data
BA Stynes and LG Veitch
Australian Journal of Agricultural Research
34(2) 167 - 181
Published: 1983
Abstract
As a part of a general investigation of factors that affect wheat crops on Yorke Peninsula, S. Aust., pathogens were measured at 3 and 8 weeks after emergence of the crop and at anthesis. A first study for regression work showed that, except on the coronal root system at anthesis, the pathogen data were independent of the soil and cultural practice data. Further, it showed that patterning within the pathogens was quite weak and so the value of alternative representations was marginal in this situation. In a second study, significant relationships were found between logarithmically transformed pathogen data, first within the pathogens between sampling times and root systems, and second between the pathogens and the soil and cultural practice data. The former relationships were mostly of the expected type in that high levels of a particular pathogen tended to persist over sampling times and extend over both root systems. The latter relationships were generally weaker, with the two most marked being (i) a tendency in sandy soils for coronal roots at anthesis to have high levels of Rhizoctonia solani, and (ii) for seminal roots at anthesis to have high levels of Heterodera avenae when plants were grown in shallow soils on calcareous rocks, particularly where the farmers applied high levels of superphosphate.https://doi.org/10.1071/AR9830167
© CSIRO 1983