Corn growers urged to be on lookout in 2021.
Writer
Linda GeistCOLUMBIA, Mo. – Missouri corn growers should scout for an emerging crop disease, tar spot, in 2021, says University of Missouri Extension plant pathologist Kaitlyn Bissonnette.
She identified tar spot in four far northeastern Missouri counties: Scotland, Lewis and Clark in 2019 and Marion in 2020. She expects it to spread in the northern half of Missouri and then to the middle of the state.
Tar spot, caused by the fungal pathogen Phyllachora maydis, has spread to 10 states since it was first found in the U.S. in 2015. In 2018 it caused significant yield losses in Illinois, Indiana, Wisconsin and Michigan.
Tar spot appears as circular or oval raised black dots (stromata) on the both sides of leaves, the sheaths and husks, Bissonnette says. A brown or tan halo often surrounds the raised black spots. It can appear on brown and green tissue, alone or in numbers.
Tar spot is often confused with other diseases such as southern corn rust. Unlike the pustules of southern corn rust or common rust, the stromata of tar spot do not break through the leaf’s surface.
The tar spot pathogen can infect multiple times in a single season. It overwinters on soil surface residues and spreads by wind and heavy rain. Conditions that favor the pathogen include monthly average temperatures of 63 to 72 F, relative high humidity greater than 75%, seven or more hours of leaf wetness at night, monthly rainfall of more than 5.9 inches, and 10-20 foggy days a month.
Tar spot is most likely to appear during mid-to-late grain fill in Missouri corn fields. Bissonnette recommends scouting mid-to-late August through harvest.
Few fungicides are labeled for tar spot management, but researchers are testing the effectiveness of many commercially available products. The Crop Protection Network, www.CropProtectionNetwork.org, has an efficacy comparison table based on trials conducted by land-grant university researchers.
A Crop Protection Network report by Darcy Telenko of Purdue University estimates tar spot yield losses at 0.34 to 1.45 bushel per acre for every 1% increase in severity. Affected plants have reduced ear weight, poor kernel fill and loose kernels.
Use practices such as crop rotation to reduce tar spot development, Bissonnette says. Corn-on-corn fields face the highest risk of tar spot.
For an interactive map showing the spread of tar spot, visit corn.ipmpipe.org/diseases.
If you spot tar spot, contact Bissonnette at bissonnettek@missouri.edu or 573-882-9106.
Photos available:
https://extension.missouri.edu/media/wysiwyg/Extensiondata/NewsAdmin/Photos/2020/20200810-TS-Fig3.jpg
Stroma of tar spot covering a leaf with both green tissue and brown senescing tissue. Multiple diseases can occur with tar spot. These black raised dots are the stroma of the tar spot pathogen, which overwinters on residues at the soil surface. Photo by K. Wise.
https://extension.missouri.edu/media/wysiwyg/Extensiondata/NewsAdmin/Photos/2020/20200810-TS-Fig4.jpg
A single stroma of the tar spot pathogen on a brown senescing leaf. At low levels, tar spot can be difficult to detect, as it is only a single spot on a single leaf. Photo by K. Bissonnette.