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Fungicides Can Increase Asian Maize Production: Case study

Written By Unknown on 1 Apr 2013 | 10:25

Traditionally, maize has been grown in Asia primarily as a subsistence food crop. In recent years, the per capita consumption of maize as a food crop has declined while the use of maize as a feed crop for livestock has increased. Maize yields are especially low in India, Indonesia and the Philippines    approximately one-half of the yield of maize in China, Thailand and Vietnam.
Fungicides

Brown Stripe downy mildewThe downy mildew diseases have been a major limiting factor in production of maize in Asia throughout this century. Java downy mildew is of great importance in Indonesia, where depending on the year, 20-80% of the total maize harvests are being lost as a result of downy mildew damage [1]. Philippine downy mildew is the most serious downy mildew disease in the Philippines, where the damage usually affects 40-60% of the total maize yield [1]. Brown stripe downy mildew incidence is greatest in regions of high rainfall in India and has been reported from most maize-growing regions of that country with yield losses ranging from 20-90% [2].
Downy mildew infections occur both as a result of soil borne overwintering spores which infect young plants and from spores produced by nearby infected hosts such as sugarcane or other grasses. Once inside maize plants, the fungus moves systemically throughout the plant. Infected leaves show discolored streaks and have a mildew growth which becomes a source of spores that spread the disease to other plants. Most of early infected plants usually die within a month. When cobs are formed, they are small and poorly-filled. Infected plants have weak and thin stems and poor root growth. 
Java Downy mildew

Philippine Downy MildewResearch has demonstrated that systemic fungicides applied as seed treatments and/or foliar sprays provide excellent control of downy mildew [3]. Yield increases of 8-10% are possible through seed treatment alone [4]. Research has shown that seed treatment combined with one foliar spray to control brown stripe downy mildew increased maize yield by 34% [5]. Seed treatments protect young seedlings from  soil-borne spores;  as the fungicide is taken up systemically in the developing seedling, young plants are protected from spores moving into the crop [6]. 
Fungicides are widely-used on maize crops in China, Thailand and Vietnam, but are used on less than 5% of the maize hectares in India, Indonesia and the Philippines [7] [8]. Recently, as a result of higher maize prices in India, seed treatments to control downy mildew are being recommended to farmers [9].

References
1.  Mikoshiba, H. 1983. Studies on the Control of Downy Mildew Disease of Maize in Tropical Countries of Asia. Technical Bulletin of the Tropical Agricultural Research Center No. 16.
2.  Putnam, M.L. 2007. Brown stripe downy mildew (Sclerophthora rayssiae var. zeae) of maize. Plant Health Progress. Published online November 8, 2007.
3.  White, D.G., Ed. 1999. Compendium of Corn Diseases, Third Edition. APS Press.
4.  Sharma, R.C., C. De Leon and M.M. Payak. 1993. Disease of maize in South and South-East Asia: problems and progress. Crop Protection. 12(6):414.
5.  Lal, S., S.C. Saxena and R.N. Upadhyay. 1980. Control of brown stripe downy mildew of maize by Metalaxyl.  Plant Disease. 64(9):874-876. 
6.  Williams, R.J. 1984. Downy mildews of tropical cereals. In Advances in Plant Pathology, Volume 2. Academic Press, London.
7.  AMIS Global web-based market data. 2012. Available at: www.amisglobal.com.
8.  Gerpacio, R.V., et al. 2001. Maize in the Philippines: Production Systems, Constraints, and Research Priorities. CIMMYT.
9.  Maize cultivation to be profitable: Tamil Nadu Agricultural University. The Hindu Newspaper. Published 07.05.2011.
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