Now that worm and thrips pressure are steadily slowing down with the cooler weather, you should be thinking about aphids if you aren’t doing so already. With the seasonal transition to cooler temperatures now occurring, along with shorter days and consistent N-NW winds, you have likely seen winged aphids showing up on your produce crops. Remember, aphids are cool season pests and don’t do well in warm weather. Winged aphid numbers on yellow sticky traps have been spiking in the Bard, North Gila, and Yuma Valleys over the past few weeks (see Areawide Trapping Network). This is not a surprise; experience shows us that this immigration occurs annually each fall. Aphid species found on winter produce crops (i.e., green peach aphid, foxglove aphids, lettuce aphids, cabbage/turnip aphids) do not over-summer here, rather they migrate into our cropping system from mountainous regions of southern California via wind currents during the fall. They also arrive to the desert on infested transplants originating from the coast. We’ve recently found lettuce aphid colonizing organic lettuce transplants. Once aphids reach our desert valleys, they typically land on native vegetation and then into produce fields, moving among weeds and crops until they find a suitable host to feed and colonize on. But no need to panic if you suddenly find a few winged aphids on a lettuce plant. But it is important that you correctly identify the aphid species present. This time of the year it’s not uncommon to find winged aphids on lettuce that do not colonize the crop. Examples of winged aphids that can be found on produce crops would include aphids that colonize small grains (i.e., oat bird-cherry aphid) or alfalfa (i.e., blue alfalfa aphid, cowpea aphid). Because these aphid species will not colonize produce crops, it is important to be able to distinguish them from the aphids that do colonize and require management to prevent problems at harvest (i.e., green peach aphid, foxglove aphid, lettuce aphid, cabbage aphid, turnip aphid). Knowing which aphid species is colonizing your crop can also influence your choice of insecticide, but more on that in a later update. Bottom Line: proper aphid identification is important; it can save a PCA time and money and prevent unnecessary insecticide applications. If you find an unusual aphid in your produce, don’t hesitate to drop it by the Ag Center and we’ll get it identified for you. If you want to make fast and accurate IDs, you might use the attached publication Aphid Identification Guide for Desert Produce Crops that can assist you in identifying winged and wingless (apterous) aphids important in leafy vegetables and Cole crops.
Lettuce fields right now are covered with downy mildew after the unusual amount of rain we got this year in the desert southwest.
Another disease to look out for is downy mildew in onions.
Downy mildew of onions is caused by the fungus-like Stramenopile Peronospora destructor. The pathogen produces abundant sporangia that germinate directly acting as spores. Reported hosts other than onions include shallot, leek, garlic and chives. The fungus overwinters in volunteer hosts, cull piles, and debris. Spores are wind borne. Spores of the fungus present in soil or bulbs germinate, infect roots or bulbs, and develop systemically in the plant. Spores that land on the leaf surface produce local lesions that can spread systemically to younger tissue. Infection can spread rapidly under cool (34– 82 °F), damp conditions generating new inoculum within the field. The pathogen requires cool temperatures and the presence of free moisture (rainfall, dew or overhead irrigation) to infect onion plants. Under those conditions repeated disease cycles may occur with devastating results.
Disease management: Regular scouting of field is important to assess disease severity and apply preventative fungicides. Disease management includes use of disease free bulbs, transplants and seed. Crop rotation with non host (small grain, corn) for at least 3 years. Destroy volunteer plants, debris and cull pile. Better soil drainage, better circulation, preventative spray can reduce disease occurrence. Always rotate fungicide from different groups to avoid resistance build up.
Band-Steam Applicator for Controlling Soilborne Pathogens and Weeds in Lettuce
Steam sterilization of soils is commonly used in plant nurseries and greenhouses for effective control of soilborne pathogens and weed seeds. The technique, however, is highly energy intensive as the entire soil profile is heated. This is too costly and slow to be practical for field scale vegetable production. To reduce energy consumption and cost, use of band-steaming, where steam is applied only in the area where it is needed – in the plant root zone, is proposed. In this method, narrow strips of soil centered on the seed line are treated with steam rather than the whole bed.
Over the course of the last year, we developed a prototype band-steam and co-product applicator that is designed to raise soil temperatures in a band 2” deep by 4” wide to levels sufficient to control soilborne pathogens (140 °F for > 20 minutes) and weed seed (150 °F for > 20 minutes). The device is principally comprised of a 35 BHP steam generator and a co-product applicator mounted on top of a bed shaper (Fig.1). The apparatus applies steam via shank injection and from cone shaped ports on top of the bed shaper. An exothermic compound can be co-applied via shank injection and/or a banding spray nozzle. The rationale behind co-applying an exothermic compound with steam is that exothermic compounds react and release heat when combined with water, thereby reducing energy requirements and increasing travel speed.
Preliminary testing of the device this spring in Yuma, AZ were very promising. Trial results showed that application of steam alone effectively raised soil temperature in the center of the seed line to levels required for effective pest control (140 °F for more than 20 minutes). Use of the exothermic compound increased soil temperature by about 10 °F. A video of the device in action can be found at the link provided below.
We are currently evaluating the device in field trials with lettuce in Salinas, CA. Target pests in these experiments conducted in collaboration with Steve Fennimore, UC Davis, are soil pathogens which cause Sclerotinia lettuce drop and in-row weeds. Future articles will report the findings of this research.
This fall, we will be replicating these tests in Yuma, AZ and also investigating the effectiveness of band-steam for controlling Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. lactucae which causes Fusarium wilt of lettuce. Heat has been shown to effectively kill Fusarium oxysporum spores and control Fusarium wilt disease. As an example, soil solarization, where clear plastic is placed over crop beds during the summer, raises soil temperatures to 150-155˚F at the soil surface, effectively killing the pathogen and reducing disease incidence by 45-98% (Matheron and Porchas, 2010).
These projects are sponsored by USDA-NIFA, the Arizona Specialty Crop Block Grant Program and the Arizona Iceberg Lettuce Research Council. We greatly appreciate their support.
If you are interested in seeing the machine operate or would like more information, please feel free to contact me.
See the band-steam and co-product applicator in action!
References:
Matheron, M. E., & Porchas, M. 2010. Evaluation of soil solarization and flooding as management tools for Fusarium wilt of lettuce. Plant Dis. 94:1323-1328.
Sprangletop has become increasingly widespread in Arizona mostly because of its growth habits and tolerance to many commonly used herbicides. It is in the Leptochloa genus which is derived from the Greek words leptos (thin) and chloa (grass). There are more than 150 species of sprangletop worldwide but only three in Arizona and two in Yuma County. The two that are the most common in the low desert are Mexican Sprangletop, which is Leptochloa uninervia and Red Sprangletop, Leptochloa filiformis. A third species, Bearded Sprangletop, Leptochloa fascicularis, is more common at higher elevations of 1500 feet or higher. It is not uncommon to find both Red and Mexican Sprangletop in the same field and it is not hard to distinguish them when they are side by side. Red Sprangletop has a light green leaf blade which is similar in width to watergrass and barnyardgrass. It has very fine hairs and very small and fine branches and spiklets. It also has a long membranous ligule. The name Red refers to the leaf sheath, which is characteristically red, rather than the seed head. Mexican Sprangletop has a thinner leaf blade which is darker green or grayish in color and similar in appearance to common bermudagrass. The seed head is distinctly coarser than that of Red Sprangletop. Side by side, leaf color and size of the seed make it easy to distinguish these two. Both of these grasses are classified as summer annuals, but they grow more like perennials in the low desert. Sprangletop does very well in the hottest part of the summer and typically germinates from seed during the hottest period between July and September. Once established, however, it often survives through the cold winter months. It grows into clumps that often appear to be dead during the winter. New shoots commonly grow from these established crowns the next season. When this occurs, preemergent herbicides such as Trifluralin or Prowl are ineffective. Some Sprangletop plants stay green and grow through the winter. Many of the postemergence, grass specific herbicides that control many grasses are ineffective on Sprangletop. This also has contributed to the spread of these weeds. Sethoxydim (Poast) and Fluazifop (Fusilade) do not control either Red or Mexican sprangletop. Only Clethodim (Select Max, Select, Arrow and others) is the only one of these grass herbicides that is effective and only at the highest labeled rates. Two applications are often necessary to achieve season long control.