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Physiological variation among native and exotic winter annual plants associated with microbiotic crusts in the Mojave Desert
Authors:DeFalco  Lesley A  Detling  James K  Tracy  C Richard  Warren  Steven D
Institution:(1) Eastern Cereal and Oilseed Research Centre, Central Experimental Farm, Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, K1A 0C6
Abstract:An experiment was established in 1992 in eastern Ontario, Canada to determine the effects of crop rotation (continuous maize, soybean-maize and alfalfa-maize) and nitrogen (N) amendment 0, 100 and 200 kg N ha–1 of fertilizer (NH4NO3), and 50 and 100 Mg ha–1 (wet wt.) each of stockpiled and rotted dairy manure] on maize production and soil properties. From 1997 to 1999, an additional study was added to the experiment to investigate treatment effects on the susceptibility of maize hybrids to gibberella ear rot. A moderately resistant and a susceptible hybrid were planted in each plot and inoculated with a macroconidial suspension of Fusarium graminearum by both the silk channel injection and the kernel-wound techniques. At harvest, ears were rated for the severity of disease symptoms and harvested kernels were analyzed for the mycotoxin deoxynivalenol (DON). The greatest number of significant N effects were found in the continuous maize treatments and with the susceptible hybrid. Most N amendments decreased both disease severity and DON accumulation in the susceptible hybrid. The most consistent effect was a decrease in disease severity with 100 kg N ha–1 fertilizer and an increase in disease severity with the higher rate of 200 kg N ha–1. This study is the first to report on the effects of soil N amendments on gibberella ear rot susceptibility.
Keywords:crop rotation  deoxynivalenol  Fusarium graminearum  maize  nitrogen
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