Karnal Bunt Disease
Research forcuses on its persistence in soil
How serious is Karnal bunt and what should Arizona growers do about
it? Does this controversial fungus disease of wheat and other small
grains, identified on four kernels of Arizona durum seed wheat in 1996,
merit a zero tolerance policy in certified grain? And is it possible
to completely eradicate it from a field?
Growers, regulatory agencies and scientists have different answers
to these questions, but they all agree that more information is needed
about how the Karnal bunt fungus survives. When the bunted kernels were
found in Arizona in 1996, a federal quarantine was placed on Arizona
wheat, restricting its movement. Because the United States is the world's
largest exporter of wheat, the policy regarding this disease has far-reaching
implications for growers. Twenty-one foreign countries have rejected
wheat containing Karnal bunt.
In spite of these extreme measures, members of the American Phytopathological
Society, including Merritt Nelson, head of the Department of Plant Pathology
at The University of Arizona, maintain that it has always been regarded
as a minor disease of wheat. They say it pales in comparison to diseases
of wheat such as stem rust, which also is not a problem in Arizona,
but which cuts yields significantly in other wheat growing areas.
The current argument centers more on the political aspects of trade
agreements and what other markets will accept, but the role of scientists
in the UA College of Agriculture, as members of the Karnal Bunt Task
Force, has been to objectively examine in greater detail the way the
fungus spreads and operates.
"We believe it is important for us to be involved in this research,
because of its impact on growers," Nelson says. It's a way to help agencies
and growers make decisions about planting, soil management, and postharvest
crop handling. It all begins with the way the fungus travels.
"This disease is spread by the wind," Nelson says. "The scientific
literature shows that burning trash from an infected wheat crop ejects
spores into the stratosphere, up to 3,000 meters (10,000 feet) where
they can travel for miles. Suppressing it is possible; eradicating it
is not." Nelson believes the spores of the fungus are already widely
distributed over the United States and possibly Canada. Once spores
are in the soil, the disease will only develop when the climate is just
right, and even then, there must be a very large number of spores present.
"It takes a tremendous amount of inoculum in the field to see even
a small amount of the disease," Nelson says. He believes the fungus
has actually been present in the U.S. for several years, but was not
detected until more sophisticated methods of diagnosing it were developed.
In the life cycle of the fungus, the stage called the teliospore (thick-walled
resting spore) develops in the infected kernels, then drops into the
soil where it has been reported to live for up to five years. Not enough
is known, however, about how soil conditions and farming practices affect
the persistence of the teliospore in the soil.
"I am going to be working with scientists at APHIS/USDA on a project
to determine the survival capability of these teliospores in Arizona
soils," says Mary Olsen, a plant pathologist in the UA College of Agriculture.
"We'd like to compare irrigated and non-irrigated soil to find how long
the teliospores remain alive (viable) and to check the survival of the
spores at different depths."
To do this, Olson will bury samples of soil infested with Karnal bunt
teliospores at different depths in field plots at the UA Campus Agricultural
Center in Tucson. The soil has been analyzed and sent to the APHIS research
facility in Maryland where it will be infested. The soil will be put
into special bags that prevent the spores from escaping and the plots
will be fenced.
"We'll bury them in the soil and dig up a few every three months over
a period of three years," Olson says. "We'll send samples back to APHIS
as we take them out, so scientists there can determine how many spores
have survived."
The results of these studies will assist growers in choosing cultivation
and rotation schedules that discourage the growth and spread of the
fungus. Future studies will target the effect of cultivation, plants
and competition from other microorganisms in the soil on survival of
the fungus.
What is Karnal Bunt?
Named
for the city of Karnal, India, where this fungus disease first appeared
on a wheat crop in 1931, Karnal bunt damages seed heads by replacing
kernels with a brown-black, powdery mass of foul-smelling spores. Flour
made from a crop that is infected at the rate of 3% or more will have
a fishy odor and taste, making it unfit for human consumption from a
cosmetic standpoint. While the fungus reduces the quality of the crop,
no serious yield reductions have been reported in India or more recently,
in Mexico, where the fungus appeared in 1970. The fungus is nontoxic
to humans and livestock.
Caused by the fungus Tilletia indica, the disease is also known as
partial bunt because it usually damages only part of a kernel. The strict
environmental conditions that favor the growth of the fungus involve
the precise timing of high humidity and/or rain occurring during the
flowering of the crop, at the same time the spores are blowing across
a field. Crops affected include common wheat, durum wheat, rye and triticale.
The disease is difficult to diagnose in the field because the pathogen
grows inside the seedhead, and because it usually does not infect a
large number of plants or even an entire plant. Seed samples must be
washed and centrifuged in a laboratory to find the spores of the fungus.
Chemical seed treatments, fungicides and fumigation provide adequate
control.
Article written by Susan McGinley, ECAT, College of
Agriculture
This is part of the 1997 Arizona Experiment Station Research Report
This document is located at http://ag.arizona.edu/pubs/general/resrpt1997/karnal.html
Return to Index for 1997 report
Researchers:
Merritt Nelson Department of Plant Pathology
(520) 621-1828
mrnelson@ag.arizona.edu
Mary Olsen
Department of Plant Pathology
(520) 621-1828
molsen@ag.arizona.edu
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